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HAP40 binds deep within the solenoid, acting as a structural scaffold that locks HTT to a compact and stable conformation. This explains why HTT levels i cells tightly correlate with HAP40: without HAP40, HTT becomes unstable and prone to degradation.
HAP40 binds deep within the solenoid, acting as a structural scaffold that locks HTT to a compact and stable conformation. This explains why HTT levels i cells tightly correlate with HAP40: without HAP40, HTT becomes unstable and prone to degradation.
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<Structure load='6X9O==Your Heading Here (maybe something like 'Structure')==
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<Structure load='6X9O'==Your Heading Here (maybe something like 'Structure')==
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<StructureSection load='3rec' size='350' side='right' caption='Escherichia coli reca protein-bound DNA (PDB entry [[3rec]])' scene=''>
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<StructureSection load='6X9O' size='350' side='right' caption='Escherichia coli reca protein-bound DNA (PDB entry [[3rec]])' scene=''>
Anything in this section will appear adjacent to the 3D structure and will be scrollable.
Anything in this section will appear adjacent to the 3D structure and will be scrollable.

Revision as of 13:28, 30 November 2025

Introduction

Huntingtin (HTT) is a large scaffolding protein essential for neuronal trafficking and cytoskeletal regulation . Expansion of its polyglutamine (polyQ) tract causes misfolding and aggregation, leading to Huntington’s disease (HD). Understanding HTT’s three-dimensional structure is crucial for linking its architecture to both normal function and disease pathology. A major challenge in HTT research has been understanding its full three-dimensional structure, because HTT is extremely big and flexible. The paper is associated with this structure (Guo et al., 2021) uses cryo-electron microscopy to reveal how HTT adopts a defined architecture only when bound to its stabilizing partner, HAP40.

Structural Overview

The cryo-EM structure of the HTT–HAP40 complex (PDB 6X9O) shows that HTT folds into a large , curved α-solenoid built from HEAT repeats. These repeats form three major regions:

  • N-HEAT domain – flexible and involved in cause interactions.
  • Bridge domain – links both halves of HTT and helps define its curvature.
  • C-HEAT domain – a regulatory domain sensitive to polyQ-dependent changes.

HAP40 binds deep within the solenoid, acting as a structural scaffold that locks HTT to a compact and stable conformation. This explains why HTT levels i cells tightly correlate with HAP40: without HAP40, HTT becomes unstable and prone to degradation.

Escherichia coli reca protein-bound DNA (PDB entry 3rec)

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