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"Scientists close in on genes responsible for Parkinson's disease"

 Public release date: 19-Dec-2005
[Contact: Tony Stephenson
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Imperial College London 

Scientists close in on genes responsible for Parkinson's disease
Scientists have identified 570 genes that act abnormally during the development 
of Parkinson's Disease, a finding which could help doctors predict the 
likelihood of it developing, and provide targets for new treatments. 
The research published in Neurogenetics, by the team from Imperial College 
London and the University of Liege, Belgium, uses microarrays to analyse brains 
from Parkinson's patients. Microarrays are laboratory chips able to pick out 
which genes are active when different processes are occurring in the brain. When 
they analysed brains from people with Parkinson's, they found that out of all 
25,000 human genes, regulation of 570 was highly abnormal in Parkinson's brains 
compared with non-diseased brains. This is the first study on Parkinson's 
disease where all human genes were studied. 

The researchers analysed 23 brains from recently deceased patients, 15 affected 
by Parkinson's and 8 control brains. The majority of brains were provided by the 
UK Parkinson's Disease Society Tissue Bank at Imperial College London. 

Dr Linda Moran from Imperial College London and one of the authors of the paper, 
said: "This research shows there are a considerable number of genes 
associated with the development of Parkinson's, potentially providing new clues 
for how to treat this disease. Now that we can identify these genes it may be 
possible to develop new therapies to help the increasing numbers of Parkinson's 
patients." 

The team, led by Professor Manuel Graeber, analysed two parts of the brain which 
are affected by neurodegeneration in Parkinson's; the substantia nigra in the 
mid-brain, and the cerebral cortex. They were able to eliminate around 15,000 
genes from any role in Parkinson's, as they were not found to be active in the 
substantia nigra, the part of the brain most affected by Parkinson's. 

Dawn Duke, MS, from Imperial College London, and one of the authors of the paper 
said: "In addition to identifying those genes linked with the development 
of Parkinson's, this research has also shown that many of these genes were 
especially active in Parkinson's brains. By limiting the activity of these 
genes, we may be able to control or even stop the development of 
Parkinson's." 


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The study was funded by the UK Parkinson's Disease Society. 


http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-12/icl-sci121905.php
  
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