Description
Recent evidence supports a role for RNA as a common pathogenic agent in both the  polyglutamine and untranslated dominant expanded repeat disorders. One feature of all  repeat sequences currently associated with disease is their predicted ability to form a hairpin  secondary structure at the RNA level. In order to investigate mechanisms by which hairpin forming  repeat RNAs could induce neurodegeneration, we have looked for alterations in gene  transcripts as hallmarks of the cellular response to toxic hairpin repeat RNAs. Three disease associated  repeat sequences - CAG, CUG and AUUCU - were specifically expressed in the  neurons of Drosophila and resultant common, early, transcriptional changes assessed by  microarray analyses. Transcripts that encode several components of the Akt/Gsk3- signalling  pathway were altered as a consequence of expression of these repeat RNAs, indicating that  this pathway is a component of the neuronal response to these pathogenic RNAs and may  represent an important common therapeutic target in this class of diseases.