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Mutations In A Multifunctional Protein Cause Parkinsonism
Public release date: 17-Nov-2004
Contact: Erik Kaldor  <[log in to unmask]>
904-953-2299
Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville

Mutations in a multifunctional protein cause parkinsonism
LRRK2 gene may play a central role in the pathogenesis of several
neurodegenerative disorders
A team of researchers at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., and
colleagues in Canada and Germany have discovered a gene and six
mutations of it that cause symptoms associated with Parkinson's
disease and other neurodegenerative disorders. Their discovery will
be reported in the Nov. 18 issue of the journal, Neuron.

The team found a mutation of the gene, named LRRK2, in members of six
families with many individuals affected by Parkinson's disease.
Surprisingly, brain autopsy on deceased, affected family members who
participated in this research indicate mutations in the LRRK2 gene
play a central role in developing pathology characteristic of
Parkinson's disease and other neurodegenerative disorders such as
Alzheimer's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrig's
disease).

For 14 years Mayo Clinic neurologist Dr. Zbigniew Wszolek has studied
the two largest families in which a LRRK2 mutation was found. "The
discovery of this gene will have major implications for the
understanding of mechanisms leading to the development of these
neurodegenerative diseases," he says. "We also hope that continued
study of this gene will lead to curative treatments for Parkinson's
disease and other similar conditions."

Mayo Clinic neurologist Dr. Ryan Uitti has treated members of one of
the six families with the gene mutation. "This finding is potentially
a giant leap forward," he says. "Many people with Parkinson's disease
have dementia as well, and this may help to explain how that occurs."


The discovery is the culmination of research into the cause of
autosomal dominant, late- onset Parkinson's disease in the studied
families. This team and others have previously narrowed a genetic
cause for this form of inherited parkinsonism to a region of
chromosome 12 called PARK8.

Mayo Clinic neuroscientist Matthew Farrer, Ph.D., and his team,
continued to perform sophisticated genetic analyses on DNA collected
from family members. Their work revealed the culprit gene and the
multifunctional protein that it codes for.

Mayo Clinic neuropathologist Dr. Dennis Dickson performed brain
tissue studies that revealed for the first time one gene was
responsible for a range of pathology associated with a host of
neurodegenerative disorders.

Dickson's studies revealed sufferers uniformly exhibited pathology
consistent with Parkinson's disease. Some exhibited additional
pathology associated with either diffuse Lewy body disease,
Alzheimer's disease or Lou Gehrig's disease.

###

This research was supported in part by Mayo Foundation and the Morris
K. Udall National Institutes of Health Parkinson's Disease Center of
Excellence grant awarded to Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville.

SOURCE: EurekAlert, DC
http://tinyurl.com/6239z

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Web site: Parkinsons Resources on the WWWeb
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