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Identification of sixteen novel candidate genes for late onset Parkinson's disease.

Authors :
Gialluisi, Alessandro
Gialluisi, Alessandro
Reccia, Mafalda Giovanna
Modugno, Nicola
Nutile, Teresa
Lombardi, Alessia
Di Giovannantonio, Luca Giovanni
Pietracupa, Sara
Ruggiero, Daniela
Scala, Simona
Gambardella, Stefano
International Parkinson’s Disease Genomics Consortium (IPDGC)
Iacoviello, Licia
Gianfrancesco, Fernando
Acampora, Dario
D'Esposito, Maurizio
Simeone, Antonio
Ciullo, Marina
Esposito, Teresa
Gialluisi, Alessandro
Gialluisi, Alessandro
Reccia, Mafalda Giovanna
Modugno, Nicola
Nutile, Teresa
Lombardi, Alessia
Di Giovannantonio, Luca Giovanni
Pietracupa, Sara
Ruggiero, Daniela
Scala, Simona
Gambardella, Stefano
International Parkinson’s Disease Genomics Consortium (IPDGC)
Iacoviello, Licia
Gianfrancesco, Fernando
Acampora, Dario
D'Esposito, Maurizio
Simeone, Antonio
Ciullo, Marina
Esposito, Teresa
Source :
Molecular neurodegeneration; vol 16, iss 1, 35; 1750-1326
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BackgroundParkinson's disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative movement disorder affecting 1-5% of the general population for which neither effective cure nor early diagnostic tools are available that could tackle the pathology in the early phase. Here we report a multi-stage procedure to identify candidate genes likely involved in the etiopathogenesis of PD.MethodsThe study includes a discovery stage based on the analysis of whole exome data from 26 dominant late onset PD families, a validation analysis performed on 1542 independent PD patients and 706 controls from different cohorts and the assessment of polygenic variants load in the Italian cohort (394 unrelated patients and 203 controls).ResultsFamily-based approach identified 28 disrupting variants in 26 candidate genes for PD including PARK2, PINK1, DJ-1(PARK7), LRRK2, HTRA2, FBXO7, EIF4G1, DNAJC6, DNAJC13, SNCAIP, AIMP2, CHMP1A, GIPC1, HMOX2, HSPA8, IMMT, KIF21B, KIF24, MAN2C1, RHOT2, SLC25A39, SPTBN1, TMEM175, TOMM22, TVP23A and ZSCAN21. Sixteen of them have not been associated to PD before, were expressed in mesencephalon and were involved in pathways potentially deregulated in PD. Mutation analysis in independent cohorts disclosed a significant excess of highly deleterious variants in cases (p = 0.0001), supporting their role in PD. Moreover, we demonstrated that the co-inheritance of multiple rare variants (≥ 2) in the 26 genes may predict PD occurrence in about 20% of patients, both familial and sporadic cases, with high specificity (> 93%; p = 4.4 × 10- 5). Moreover, our data highlight the fact that the genetic landmarks of late onset PD does not systematically differ between sporadic and familial forms, especially in the case of small nuclear families and underline the importance of rare variants in the genetics of sporadic PD. Furthermore, patients carrying multiple rare variants showed higher risk of manifesting dyskinesia induced by levodopa treatment.ConclusionsBesides confirming the extreme genetic

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Molecular neurodegeneration; vol 16, iss 1, 35; 1750-1326
Notes :
application/pdf, Molecular neurodegeneration vol 16, iss 1, 35 1750-1326
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391580803
Document Type :
Electronic Resource