Brain Advance Access originally published online on May 21, 2003
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Brain, Vol. 126, No. 8, 1722-1733,
August 2003
© 2003 Guarantors of Brain
doi: 10.1093/brain/awg172
Review Article |
Parkinsons disease: piecing together a genetic jigsaw
1 Genetic-Epidemiologic Unit, Departments of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Erasmus Medical Centre, Rotterdam, The Netherlands and 2 Department of Neurological Sciences, La Sapienza University, Rome, Italy
Correspondence to: M. C. J. Dekker, Genetic-Epidemiologic Unit, Erasmus Medical Centre, PO Box 1738, 3000 DR Rotterdam, The Netherlands E-mail: m.dekker{at}erasmusmc.nl
Received February 8, 2003. Revised March 17, 2003. Accepted March 20, 2003.
| Summary |
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The role of genetics in the pathogenesis of Parkinsons disease has been subject to debate for decades. In recent years, the discovery of five genes and several more loci has provided important insight into its molecular aetiology. Some Parkinsons disease genes possibly cause Parkinsons disease by protein aggregation. The presence of Lewy bodies in carriers of mutations in one gene and their absence in carriers of another, however, still point towards a complex pathogenic network, with Parkinsons disease as a common clinical end point. The recent identification of the fourth and fifth Parkinsons disease genes suggests multiple pathwaysan impaired oxidative stress defence for mutations in DJ-1, and a defect in another signalling pathway for mutations in NR4A2. Despite knowledge of genetics in familial Parkinsons disease, our knowledge of the common, late-onset form of Parkinsons disease remains limited. In non-familial Parkinsons disease, genes and environment probably interact to give rise to the disease. We review advances in the genetics of Parkinsons disease, focusing on the monogenic forms and their clinical and population-genetic consequences.
Keywords: Parkinsons disease; genetics; review; population risk
Abbreviations: DJ-1= PARK7, Parkinsons disease gene; LOD = logarithm of odds; MPTP = 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine; NR4A2 = NURR1, Parkinsons disease gene; UCH-L1 = ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1
| Introduction |
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Clinical and neuropathological features
Parkinsons disease is a movement disorder, which is a significant cause of morbidity and mortality in later life (prevalence 1.6% in the elderly; de Rijk et al., 1995
Pathogenesis of Parkinsons disease
A consistent risk factor for Parkinsons disease is age (de Rijk et al., 1995
). The list of putative environmental risk factors is long but, over several studies, few have shown a consistent association. Exposure to pesticides is one of the most established environmental risk factors for Parkinsons disease (Jenner, 2001
). The debate about the role of genes in typical, idiopathic Parkinsons disease is ongoing. The estimated proportion of patients in the general population who have at least one relative with Parkinsons disease varies from 6.4 to 10.3%, whereas studies using hospital-based patient series report frequencies of up to 33% (Bonifati et al., 1995
; De Michele et al., 1996
; Marder et al., 1996
; Elbaz et al., 1999
). The increased frequencies in clinic-based populations could truly be due to a more frequent family history amongst clinic-based patients, yet, in these patients, recollection bias for Parkinsons disease in relatives may also play a role. A large study in twins suggested strong inheritance in Parkinsons disease with onset before the age of 50 years. Beyond this onset age, however, only weak evidence for a genetic aetiology was found (Tanner et al., 1999
). Another twin study using PET neuroimaging revealed, however, (preclinical) disease concordance in twins regardless of onset age (Piccini et al., 1999
).
From a genetic perspective, several modes of inheritance for Parkinsons disease have been postulated, ranging from autosomal dominant inheritance with variable penetrance, to mitochondrial inheritance (Mjones, 1949
; Wooten et al., 1997
). Most studies of recent date indicate a complex, multifactorial mode of inheritance, with several genes interacting with environmental risk factors. An incident possibly illustrating a combination of environmental and genetic factors in Parkinsons disease is the small epidemic of parkinsonism in MPTP users (Langston et al., 1983
). MPTP was a component of a party drug, giving rise to parkinsonism clinically indistinguishable from idiopathic Parkinsons disease in relatively young individuals. Not all those exposed to MPTP, however, developed parkinsonism. A certain genetic make-up may therefore have made certain people more vulnerable to the effects of MPTP, or have protected others.
Yet there are a number of families in which Parkinsons disease segregates in an unambiguously Mendelian fashion. Since 1997, linkage to 11 genes and loci has been reported (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997
; Gasser et al., 1998
; Kitada et al., 1998
; Leroy et al., 1998
; Farrer et al., 1999
; Hampshire et al., 2001
; Valente et al., 2001
; Funayama et al., 2002
; Hicks et al., 2002
; Bonifati et al., 2003
; Le et al., 2003
). Six of these are implicated in Parkinsons disease with an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997
; Gasser et al., 1998
; Leroy et al., 1998
; Farrer et al., 1999
; Funayama et al., 2002
; Le et al., 2003
), four in that with autosomal recessive inheritance (Kitada et al., 1998
; Hampshire et al., 2001
; Valente et al., 2001
; Bonifati et al., 2003
) and one in late-onset, seemingly sporadic Parkinsons disease (Hicks et al., 2002
).
| Parkinsons disease genes and loci, clinical and neuropathological phenotypes |
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Several families with Mendelian patterns of inheritance had been described in detail, without hard evidence for a genetic basis of Parkinsons disease until the discovery of the first familial Parkinsons disease gene in 1997 (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997
-synuclein, parkin, UCH-L1, DJ-1 and NR4A2) have been identified in familial Parkinsons disease (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997
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Parkin (PARK2)
In 1998, mutations in a newly identified gene, parkin (PARK2, chromosome 6q25.2q27), were described in Japanese families segregating early-onset parkinsonism as an autosomal recessive trait (Kitada et al., 1998
Parkin is a large gene spanning 1.5 Mb and containing 12 exons, in which to date >70 mutations have been identified (V. Bonifati, personal communication). New developments in the detection of mutations in the gene are expected to increase this number further. The protein product of parkin is an E3 ubiquitin ligase (Shimura et al., 2000
). Ubiquitin is, as its name suggests, one of the most abundant proteins in the brain and, like
-synuclein, contributes to the formation of Lewy bodies (Schlossmacher et al., 2002
). A particular form of
-synuclein (PARK1) has been shown to be the substrate for parkin (Shimura et al., 2001
), thus linking these two Parkinsons disease genes by the ubiquitin system.
DJ-1 (PARK7)
In 2001, shortly after the localization of the PARK6 locus (Valente et al., 2001
), a second locus on chromosome 1p36, PARK7, was reported. PARK7 is
25 centiMorgans (cM) removed from the PARK6 locus. Linkage to the PARK7 locus was first identified in a kindred from a genetically isolated population in the South-West of The Netherlands segregating autosomal recessive early-onset parkinsonism (van Duijn et al., 2001
), and subsequently was confirmed in an Italian family (Bonifati et al., 2002
). In clinical features, DJ-1 parkinsonism was characterized by variable severity of disease and slow progression of symptoms, with sustained response to levodopa treatment. In addition to parkinsonism, in the original kindred and in one of the patients in the Italian DJ-1 family with DJ-1 mutations, psychiatric co-morbidity was reported (van Duijn et al., 2001
; Dekker et al., 2003
). Pathology of carriers of DJ-1 mutations is not yet available, but functional neuroimaging showed a symmetrical decrease in dopa uptake in putamen as well as in caudate, a picture resembling that in parkin- and PARK6-linked parkinsonism (Dekker et al., 2003
).
Recently, mutations in the DJ-1 gene were reported to be associated with parkinsonism in these two kindreds (Bonifati et al., 2003
). The patients in the Dutch kindred carried a homozygous deletion of DJ-1, and affected individuals in the Italian family were homozygous for the L166P mutation. The function of DJ-1 is unknown, but there is evidence for a role in the cellular response to oxidative stress. The mutant DJ-1 protein may therefore have an impaired ability to limit oxidative damage. Transfection studies showed loss of the diffuse cytosolic patterns associated with the wild-type, and co-localization of the mutant DJ-1 protein in mitochondria, although the mutant protein is also present in the nucleus. This points towards a pathogenic loss of cytoplasmic activity for mutant DJ-1.
PARK6
In 2001, linkage to chromosome 1p3536 was reported in a large Italian family, the Marsala kindred (Valente et al., 2001
). This locus, named PARK6, is associated with early-onset parkinsonism with an autosomal recessive pattern. The clinical presentation of PARK6-linked parkinsonism resembled typical Parkinsons disease, apart from an early age at onset (ranging from 32 to 48 years) and a slow progression of symptoms. Furthermore, tremor was a predominant sign and dystonia was not reported. Response to levodopa treatment was good and lasting (Valente et al., 2002
). A functional neuroimaging study showed symmetrically decreased dopa uptake in putamen as well as in caudate, much like in parkin parkinsonism (Khan et al., 2002
b). No post-mortem data are yet available on PARK6-linked parkinsonism. Since its identification, linkage to PARK6 has been confirmed in a number of small European families, reducing the candidate interval to 9 cM (Valente et al., 2002
).
PARK9
KuforRakeb syndrome is a juvenile-onset neurodegenerative disorder with an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance. The first clinical report on an Arab consanguineous kindred dated from 1994 (Najim al-Din et al., 1994
). The name of the syndrome denotes the area of origin of the kindred. KuforRakeb syndrome clinically resembled typical Parkinsons disease, with a good response to levodopa treatment with respect to the extrapyramidal dysfunction. Although listed as a Mendelian parkinsonism, there were many additional features of the PARK9 phenotype (spasticity, dementia and supranuclear gaze paralysis) which did not resemble typical Parkinsons disease. On neuroimaging, there was significant atrophy of the globus pallidus, which in a later stage became generalized. No neuropathological data are available. Linkage to a region of 9 cM on chromosome 1p36 was described in 2001 (Hampshire et al., 2001
). The PARK9 status subsequently was assigned, although, to date, no official report is available (The Genome Database, URL: http://www.gdb.org).
-Synuclein (PARK1)
Two different mutations have been identified in the
-synuclein gene (PARK1) on chromosome 4q21. In 1997, the A53T mutation was found in a large Italian/American family (the Contursi kindred; Golbe et al., 1990
) as well as in three unrelated families of Greek descent, in which Parkinsons disease was inherited with an autosomal dominant pattern (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997
). The common haplotype in the families suggested a common founder due to the age-old historical ties between the two regions of origin. This mutation subsequently has been found in a small number of other families. The second mutation, the A30P mutation, has been reported in one German family (Kruger et al., 1998
). Clinical characteristics of the patients with the A53T mutation differed from sporadic Parkinsons disease with respect to a slightly younger age at onset, a considerably lower prevalence of tremor and a more rapid clinical deterioration. Furthermore, concomitant dementia, myoclonus and central hypoventilation have been reported in parkinsonism associated with the A53T mutation (Golbe et al., 1990
; Papapetropoulos et al., 2001
; Spira et al., 2001
). Conversely, the clinical phenotype of A30P
-synuclein parkinsonism closely resembled sporadic Parkinsons disease (Kruger et al., 1998
). Neuroimaging features in
-synuclein parkinsonism were concordant with those observed in idiopathic Parkinsons disease (Samii et al., 1999
; Kruger et al., 2001
). Post-mortem examination in patients with a mutation in the
-synuclein gene showed the pattern of neuronal degeneration and the Lewy bodies so characteristic of Parkinsons disease (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997
). In the original Contursi kindred (Golbe et al., 1990
), a recent neuropathological study also revealed tau inclusions, suggesting that the
-synuclein neurodegenerative process is not entirely identical to that seen in typical idiopathic Parkinsons disease brains (Duda et al., 2002
).
The identification of
-synucleins involvement in familial Parkinsons disease has been a breakthrough in the hitherto limited knowledge about the pathogenesis of the disease.
-Synuclein was first described as a presynaptic protein in Torpedo californica (Maroteaux et al., 1988
). The protein is involved in synaptic plasticity, as was shown in an orthologue-protein study on song learning in the zebra finch (George et al., 1995
). Furthermore,
-synuclein transgenic Drosophila and mouse models exhibited progressive locomotor dysfunction and loss of dopaminergic neurons, mimicking the phenotype of Parkinsons disease (Feany and Bender, 2000
; Masliah et al., 2000
).
-Synuclein is abundantly present in brain, and, upon the identification of the mutations in its encoding gene, was identified to be a principal component of Lewy bodies (Spillantini et al., 1997
). In vitro experiments suggested that the mutant protein facilitates fibril formation, giving rise to Lewy bodies. The A53T-mutated
-synuclein formed fibrils more easily than the A30P mutant (Conway et al., 1998
). The lesser complexity of the A30P-linked clinical phenotype (resembling typical Parkinsons disease) may therefore reflect its lower degree of
-synuclein fibrillogenesis in vitro.
UCH-L1 (PARK5)
In 1998, the I93M mutation in the ubiquitin C-terminal hydroxylase L1 (UCH-L1) gene on chromosome 4p14 was identified in a family of German descent in which Parkinsons disease was inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion (Leroy et al., 1998
). By the time the described family came to attention, all reportedly affected individuals, except for two affected siblings, were deceased. The clinical phenotype in these siblings consisted of dopa-responsive parkinsonism, resembling idiopathic Parkinsons disease. Onset of symptoms in the two siblings occurred at the ages of 49 and 51 years. To date, neither radiological nor neuropathological data on this family are available. Mutations in the UCH-L1 enzyme reduce its catalytic activity in vitro, therefore possibly leading to a tendency for various protein metabolites to aggregate (Saigoh et al., 1999
). In immunofluorescence studies, Lewy bodies stained positive for UCH-L1, suggesting it also contributes to the ubiquitinproteasome pathway implicated in
-synuclein- and parkin-linked parkinsonism (Leroy et al., 1998
).
NR4A2
A recent report described two mutations in the NR4A2, or NURR1 gene (Le et al., 2003
). The clinical phenotype in the patients with mutations in NR4A2 was concordant with late-onset Parkinsons disease without atypical features. Radio logical or neuropathological data are not available. NR4A2 (chromosome 2q2223) is a gene involved in the differentiation and maintenance of dopaminergic neurons. Due to its function, previous studies had already suggested NR4A2 to be a candidate gene for Parkinsons disease (Zetterstrom et al., 1996
; Le et al., 1999
). NR4A2 was studied in a series of 107 individuals with familial Parkinsons disease (70 of whom had a history of Parkinsons disease over at least two generations). Two heterozygous mutations (291Tdel and 245T
G) were revealed in 10 individuals, who were all of European descent. Both mutations affect a non-coding exon (exon 1) of the gene and lead to a marked decrease in NR4A2 mRNA levels. The mechanism by which this mRNA transcription is targeted is not yet clear.
PARK3
In 1998, linkage was reported to chromosome 2p13 in six families in which Parkinsons disease was inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion (Gasser et al., 1998
). Clinically, there was typical dopa-responsive parkinsonism. However, dementia occurred in two of the PARK3-linked families. Ages at onset of disease ranged from 37 to 89 years. Autopsy findings showed degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra and Lewy bodies, but also Alzheimer-like neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic plaques in some patients (Wszolek et al., 2002
). The PARK3 phenotype may therefore encompass a wide pathological spectrum, ranging from parkinsonism to dementia. The PARK3-critical region spans a distance of 2.5 Mb. Analysis of the genes contained within this region has not yet revealed any causal mutation (West et al., 2001
). The disease-associated haplotype was also observed in clinically unaffected relatives, suggesting a penetrance of <40%. Two families of Northern German and Southern Danish descent showed strongest evidence for linkage and a common haplotype at PARK3, raising the possibility of a common ancestor due to the vicinity of the regions of origin of these two families.
PARK4
In 1999, a haplotype on chromosome 4p (PARK4) was reported to be segregating with Parkinsons disease as well as with postural tremor in an autosomal dominant pattern (Farrer et al., 1999
). Parkinsonism in this American kindred typically presented with asymmetrical limb heaviness and rigidity, rather than with tremor. The postural tremor did not seem to be an early manifestation of parkinsonism as it remained a separate clinical entity over time. Many atypical features in the kindred were observed, i.e. autonomic dysfunction, dementia, early-stage weight loss, myoclonus and seizures, which are not concordant with typical Parkinsons disease. The onset age was considerably lower than in sporadic Parkinsons disease (mean 33.6 years), and progression to death was rapid (Spellman et al., 1962
; Waters and Miller, 1994
; Muenter et al., 1998
). On neuropathological examination in individuals with parkinsonism, Lewy bodies were found, the distribution of which was consistent with the neuropathological diagnosis of typical Parkinsons disease (Farrer et al., 1999
). No neuropathological data are available on the family members with isolated postural tremor. Variable expression of the unknown gene is suggested by the occurrence of the PARK4 haplotype not only in individuals with parkinsonism, but also in individuals with isolated postural tremor. The PARK4 family was not large enough to achieve significant linkage, and linkage to the PARK4 region has not yet been confirmed in other studies. In the 8.5 cM-spanning PARK4 locus, no causal mutations have been identified so far. UCH-L1 (PARK5) on chromosome 4p14 (Leroy et al., 1998
) is just outside the candidate region, and could be excluded.
PARK8
In 2002, linkage to chromosome 12p11.2q13.1 was described in a Japanese family with autosomal dominant parkinsonism, the Samigahara family (Funayama et al., 2002
). The features of parkinsonism in this family resembled typical Parkinsons disease, with a good response to levodopa treatment. The mean age at onset of disease was 51 years. Neuropathological examination in four cases of PARK8 parkinsonism revealed pure nigral degeneration lacking the Lewy bodies so typical of Parkinsons disease. By parametric linkage analysis, the maximum logarithm of odds (LOD) score was 4.32; non-parametric linkage analysis increased the LOD score to 24.9. The PARK8-linked haplotype was also observed in some unaffected family members, suggesting incomplete penetrance. So far, none of the analysed genes in the 13.6 cM wide candidate gene interval have been found to have mutations.
PARK10
Unlike previously reported genes and loci, which all exhibit Mendelian inheritance patterns, PARK10 is a locus for late-onset non-Mendelian Parkinsons disease (Hicks et al., 2002
). Clinical features in the PARK10-linked families were concordant with typical, sporadic Parkinsons disease. Eighty-four percent of patients had onset of disease later than 50 years, with a mean age at onset of 65.8 years. No neuropathological or neuroimaging features have been reported. Based on a nationwide database of clinical and genealogical information, significant clustering for Parkinsons disease previously had been shown amongst these patients compared with control individuals (Sveinbjornsdottir et al., 2000
). Fifty-one families could be linked to one another in a large pedigree, suggesting a genetic aetiology. Significant linkage (LOD score 4.9) was reported for a haplotype of 7.6 cM on chromosome 1p32 in those families, each of which contained more than one Parkinsons disease patient.
| Parkinsons disease genes and loci, population attribution |
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From a clinical perspective, the increasing knowledge of genes in Parkinsons disease raises the question of to what extent mutations in these genes account for Parkinsons disease in the general population. Studies on polymorphisms (variants of a gene commonly occurring in the general population) in the familial Parkinsons disease genes
-synuclein, parkin and UCH-L1 do not provide conclusive evidence for association with typical Parkinsons disease (Kruger et al., 1999
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Population attribution by gene/locus
The parkin gene (PARK2) is one of the largest genes known (second largest after dystrophin, the Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene; Koenig et al., 1998
0.360.72% (0.09 x 4 0.18 x 4) of all sporadic Parkinsons disease in the general population (Fig. 1B). This is, however, expected to be an underestimation of the true proportion. Novel parkin mutations such as intronic and exonic rearrangements are likely to explain more disease cases in the future.
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The contribution of the DJ-1 gene (PARK7) to the general population is still unknown. The DJ-1 deletion was not observed in a sample of 200 Dutch controls from elsewhere in The Netherlands, and the point mutation was not found either in 160 controls from elsewhere in Italy (Bonifati et al., 2003
It is difficult to estimate the contribution of Mendelian Parkinsons disease loci to Parkinsons disease overall. Until the causative gene is identified, such estimates only have limited value. Linkage to the PARK6 locus was replicated in families of Italian, British, German and Dutch descent (Valente et al., 2002
). The absence of a common haplotype amongst these families suggests that the PARK6-linked form of familial parkinsonism occurs in several European countries, possibly as a result of independent mutational events in the unknown gene. The eight PARK6-linked families from the study by Valente et al. (2002
) were derived from a series of 28 families with early-onset autosomal recessive parkinsonism without evidence of parkin mutations. No detailed information is available on the criteria for selection of these 28 families. Furthermore, care should be taken when calculations are based on a small number of families, and on linkage to a locus rather than on the causal gene. Yet, based on the aforementioned numbers, PARK6 may account for
29% (eight out of 28) of parkin-negative early-onset cases with an autosomal pattern of inheritance, and thus for 15% of early-onset autosomal recessive Parkinsons disease overall (i.e. 29% of 51% of families with early-onset recessive inheritance of Parkinsons disease without parkin mutations) (Fig. 1A).
The A53T mutation in the
-synuclein gene (PARK1) was reported in a dozen families, possibly with a common founder (Polymeropoulos et al., 1997
). The Eastern Mediterranean origin of the families reported to carry the A53T mutation further supports this notion (Markopoulou et al., 1999
; Papadimitriou et al., 1999
; Papapetropoulos et al., 2001
). The other mutation in the
-synuclein gene, A30P, has been reported in one German family only (Kruger et al., 1998
). Studies in various populations have pointed out that mutations in the
-synuclein gene are very rare, explaining a small proportion of sporadic and familial Parkinsons disease overall (Chan et al., 1998
; Parsian et al., 1998
; Vaughan et al., 1998
a, b; Warner et al., 1998
). Yet this gene was the first gene to be identified in familial Parkinsons disease, and unravelling the role of
-synuclein in Parkinsons disease has been a first step towards understanding the pathogenesis of the common form, or forms, of the disease.
Since the identification of the I93M mutation in the UCH-L1 gene (PARK5, Leroy et al., 1998
), this mutation or other mutations have not been found in several other studies, indicating that mutations in the UCH-L1 gene are a very rare cause of Parkinsons disease (Leroy et al., 1998
; Harhangi et al., 1999
; Wintermeyer et al., 2000
; Zhang et al., 2000
). This could mean that, similar to the paucity of reported mutations in the APP gene in presenile dementia (St George-Hyslop et al., 1990
), the I93M mutation is one of the only viable mutations in the UCH-L1 gene, other mutations being incompatible with late-onset Parkinsons disease or even with life. Alternatively, the I93M mutation could be a rare polymorphism, coincidentally found in a sib-pair with Parkinsons disease, rather than a causal mutation (Lincoln et al., 1999
).
Due to the recent identification of NR4A2 (Le et al., 2003
), few replication reports in other patient series are available presently (Healy et al., 2002
; Rawal et al., 2002
). A haplotype analysis performed in the originally reported families with the 291Tdel mutation showed a haplotype shared by six individuals from three families with German ancestry, raising the possibility of a common founder. Mutations in NR4A2 were observed neither in 94 individuals with sporadic Parkinsons disease and in 221 unaffected controls (Le et al., 2003
), nor in other series of familial Parkinsons disease patients (Healy et al., 2002
; Rawal et al., 2002
). More information is to become available to assess the frequency of this gene at population level.
The PARK3 locus was reported to segregate with Parkinsons disease in six families, and the strongest evidence for linkage was observed in two families, possibly with a common ancestor (Gasser et al., 1998
). Neither in Parkinsons disease patients who originate from the same region, nor in patients from elsewhere in Germany was linkage to the PARK3 region confirmed (Klein et al., 1999
). Recently, however, suggestive linkage was reported to PARK3 in a Parkinsons disease sib-pair genome scan designed to detect modifiers of age at onset (DeStefano et al., 2002
).
The extent of involvement of the PARK10 locus (Hicks et al., 2002
) in Parkinsons disease is intriguing. Linkage results pointing towards the PARK10 locus are based on 117 individuals in 51 families, all of Icelandic descent and genealogically linked to one another. Data about what proportion of these 51 families is explained by PARK10 are, however, not available. A previous genealogical study by the same research group (Sveinbjornsdottir et al., 2000
) described a group of 772 Parkinsons disease patients ascertained throughout Iceland, from which the 117 individuals who were used for the linkage study were derived. This would mean that the gene contained within the PARK10 locus may account for up to 15% (117 out of 772) of Parkinsons disease in the Icelandic population. The role of PARK10 in the remaining 655 Icelandic Parkinsons disease patients (Sveinbjornsdottir et al., 2000
) is not yet known. Similarly, involvement of PARK10 in populations outside Iceland remains to be confirmed. Shortly before the PARK10 report was published, another group also reported linkage to chromosome 1p32, in which linkage concerned the age at onset of Parkinsons disease (Li et al., 2002
).
The linkage results to the PARK4, PARK8 and PARK9 loci (Farrer et al., 1999
; Hampshire et al., 2001
; Funayama et al., 2002
), finally, have not been replicated in independent families.
| Discussion |
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Eleven Parkinsons disease genes and loci have been identified since 1997. They provide valuable opportunities to study the genetic and phenotypical heterogeneity of Parkinsons disease, and thus the variety of pathogenic routes and their outcome. Nevertheless, even more questions have emerged. Some genes and loci are associated with Lewy bodies, others are not, but neuropathological data on many Parkinsons disease genes and loci are still unavailable. Two genes are involved in protein metabolism (parkin and UCH-L1), but others probably encode an antioxidant protein (DJ-1), or play a role in the mesencephalic genesis of dopaminergic neurons (NR4A2). Yet all these genes and loci lead to Parkinsons disease. The genes and loci reviewed herein presently explain only a minor fraction of Parkinsons disease in the general population. Despite this, they have had immediate implications for genetic counselling in particular families and individuals, as well as for the development of novel therapeutic strategies.
Genetic counselling
With the identification of the five Parkinsons disease genes, interest in genetic counselling and risk prediction in Parkinsons disease is growing. Genetic counselling particularly applies to patients with (familial or sporadic) juvenile to early onset of Parkinsons disease (parkin and DJ-1), and families with Mendelian segregation of Parkinsons disease (
-synuclein, parkin, UCH-L1, DJ-1 and NR4A2). The value of genetic testing in Parkinsons disease is not yet clear, since in most patients it is a clearly disabling, yet non-lethal condition. Furthermore, there is no detailed knowledge about the penetrance of the respective mutations. Outside the scope of genetic counselling are families testing negative for the established PD genes. If, however, linkage to other familial Parkinsons disease loci (PARK3, -4, -6, -8, -9 and -10) is present, these families could serve research purposes by reducing candidate gene intervals and facilitate identification of the responsible gene.
Therapeutic implications
In terms of pharmacological applications, the Parkinsons disease genes mark the transition to a new era. Unlike currently used, mainly palliative, antiparkinson treatment, new neuroprotective and curative strategies may make use of protein targets from the newly uncovered neurodegenerative pathways. In this way, abnormal protein aggregation and excessive oxidative damage may be arrested, and even be reversed or prevented, in an early stage. Equally important in this respect is the identification of possible exogenous, environmental factors, which could initiate or accelerate nigral degeneration. In the future, treatment according to a patients genetic make-up could thus be tailored to fit individual genetic susceptibility, environmental risk profile and drug metabolism characteristics.
Further research strategies
The large body of genetic evidence in Parkinsons disease is overtaking the environmental hypothesis (Langston et al., 1983
; Ben-Shlomo et al., 1996
). Yet the role for certain environmental factors, such as pesticides, in the risk of Parkinsons disease is still to be clarified (Jenner, 2001
). In spite of this revolution in Parkinsons disease genetics, however, its origin in the vast majority of patients is unresolved. A major susceptibility gene for common, sporadic Parkinsons disease, such as apolipoprotein E (APOE) is in Alzheimers disease (Strittmatter et al., 1993
), could not be identified. Polymorphisms in various other (groups of) genes were candidate for a role in the pathogenesis of Parkinsons disease, a concise overview of which can be found elsewhere (Gasser, 2001
). Inadequate numbers of cases and controls, inconsistencies in diagnostic criteria for Parkinsons disease, ethnic origin of the study population and composition of the control group all contribute to conflicting results across studies. As appeared from a large meta-analysis, only six polymorphisms showed evidence of association with Parkinsons disease overall, and further study is warranted to validate these results (Tan et al., 2000
). The PARK10 locus (Hicks et al., 2002
; Li et al., 2002
) could prove to be a susceptibility factor in Parkinsons disease and needs to be validated in other populations to assess the extent of involvement in the common form of Parkinsons disease and its onset age. Similar to this approach, but using unrelated families, are genomic screens on large numbers of affected sib-pairs or on nuclear families segregating Parkinsons disease (DeStefano et al., 2001
; Scott et al., 2001
). These studies reported association with, amongst others, loci containing the tau gene, the PARK3 locus and the PARK10 locus, respectively (Martin et al., 2001
; DeStefano et al., 2002
; Li et al., 2002
). Some of these concern loci that may control age at onset of Parkinsons disease (Li et al., 2002
; DeStefano et al., 2002
). The association with the tau gene, however, was refuted in another study (de Silva et al., 2002
).
As more genetic pieces of the aetiological jigsaw emerge, the classical definition from 1817 by James Parkinson (Parkinson, 1817
), typical Parkinsons disease being of unknown aetiology, is gradually losing ground. Should Mendelian forms be separated into nosological entities or be regarded as rare, genetic, causes of Parkinsons disease? A reclassification compatible with the 21st century on clinicalgenetic grounds is required, as clinicopathological features alone no longer justify all Parkinsons disease to be clustered as one entity.
| Acknowledgements |
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M.C.J.D., V.B. and C.M.v.D are supported by a grant of The Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO). V.B. is supported by the Ministero dellIstruzione, Università e Ricerca (MIUR, IT).
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