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Source: New England Journal of Medicine Vol. 342, No. 21
Date: May 25, 2000

Association between Early-Onset Parkinson's Disease and Mutations in the
Parkin Gene

Christoph B. Lucking, Alexandra Durr, Vincenzo Bonifati, Jenny Vaughan,
Giuseppe De Michele, Thomas Gasser, Biswadjiet S. Harhangi, Pierre Pollak,
Anne-Marie Bonnet, David Nichol, Michelle De Mari, Roberto Marconi, Emmanuel
Broussolle, Olivier Rascol, Marie Rosier, Isabelle Arnould, Ben A. Oostra,
Monique M.B. Breteler, Alessandro Filla, Giuseppe Meco, Patrice Denefle,
Nicholas W. Wood, Yves Agid, Alexis Brice, for the European Consortium on
Genetic Susceptibility in Parkinson's Disease and the French Parkinson's
Disease Genetics Study Group

Abstract

Background:
Mutations in the parkin gene have recently been identified in patients with
early-onset Parkinson's disease, but the frequency of the mutations and the
associated phenotype have not been assessed in a large series of patients.

Methods:
We studied 73 families in which at least one of the affected family members
was affected at or before the age of 45 years and had parents who were not
affected, as well as 100 patients with isolated Parkinson's disease that
began at or before the age of 45 years. All subjects were screened for
mutations in the parkin gene with use of a semiquantitative
polymerase-chain-reaction assay that simultaneously amplified several exons.
We sequenced the coding exons in a subgroup of patients. We also compared
the clinical features of patients with parkin mutations and those without
mutations.

Results:
Among the families with early-onset Parkinson's disease, 36 (49 percent) had
parkin mutations. The age at onset ranged from 7 to 58 years. Among the
patients with isolated Parkinson's disease, mutations were detected in 10 of
13 patients (77 percent) with an age at onset of 20 years or younger, but in
only 2 of 64 patients (3 percent) with an age at onset of more than 30
years. The mean (±SD) age at onset in the patients with parkin mutations was
younger than that in those without mutations (32±11 vs. 42±11 years,
P<0.001), and they were more likely to have symmetric involvement and
dystonia at onset, to have hyperreflexia at onset or later, to have a good
response to levodopa therapy, and to have levodopa-induced dyskinesias
during treatment. Nineteen different rearrangements of exons (deletions and
multiplications) and 16 different point mutations were detected.

Conclusions:
Mutations in the parkin gene are a major cause of early-onset autosomal
recessive familial Parkinson's disease and isolated juvenile-onset
Parkinson's disease (at or before the age of 20 years). Accurate diagnosis
of these cases cannot be based only on the clinical manifestations of the
disease. (N Engl J Med 2000;342:1560-7.)

Copyright © 2000 by the Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.