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<Structuresection load='6X9O' size='450' side='right' caption='Overall structure of HTT–HAP40 Complex (PDB 6X9O)'scene=''></Structuresection>
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<Structuresection load='6X9O' size='450' side='right' caption='Overall structure of HTT–HAP40 Complex (PDB 6X9O)'scene=''>
== Introduction ==
== 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.
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 ==
== Structural Overview ==
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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:
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== Structural Overview ==
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* '''N-HEAT domain''' – flexible and involved in cause interactions.
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* '''Bridge domain''' links both halves of HTT and helps define its curvature.
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The cryo-EM structure of the **HTT–HAP40 complex** (PDB **6X9O**) reveals how Huntingtin (HTT) folds into a large, curved **α-solenoid** composed of HEAT repeats. In the visualization shown here:
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* '''C-HEAT domain''' – a regulatory domain sensitive to polyQ-dependent changes.
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* **HTT is colored cyan** – representing the full HEAT-repeat solenoid of Huntingtin.
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* **HAP40 is colored orange** – bound tightly within the groove formed by HTT.
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Although the HEAT-repeat architecture of HTT is usually divided into three major **subdomains**, these subregions are **not individually colored in this scene**:
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* **N-HEAT domain** – flexible and participates in multiple interaction interfaces.
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* **Bridge domain** a central region connecting N-HEAT and C-HEAT; influences HTT curvature.
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* **C-HEAT domain** – a regulatory region sensitive to polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion.
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HAP40 (orange) binds deep within the solenoid formed by HTT (cyan), acting as a **structural brace** that stabilizes HTT. This interaction is crucial because **HTT without HAP40 becomes unstable, more flexible, and prone to degradation**, explaining why their cellular levels are tightly correlated.
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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.
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'''Click to view the overall structure:''' <scene name='10/1096890/Overall/1'>Overall Structure</scene>
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<scene name='10/1096890/Overall/1'>Overall Structure</scene>
 
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== Author &Course==
== Author &Course==
'''<scene name='10/1096890/Overall/1'>Raghav Pareek</scene> BI3323-Aug2025'''
'''<scene name='10/1096890/Overall/1'>Raghav Pareek</scene> BI3323-Aug2025'''
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</Structuresection>

Revision as of 14:26, 30 November 2025

PDB ID 6X9O

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