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Gene Linked to Parkinson's Cripples Mitochondria
05.03.06, 12:00 AM ET
WEDNESDAY, May 3 (HealthDay News) -- In a breakthrough that may eventually
lead to new ways to treat Parkinson's disease, two independent research
groups have found that a gene linked to inherited Parkinson's works by
disabling a cell's mitochondria.
Mitochondria are the power centers of the cells. They are structures within
cells that provide the energy a cell needs to move, divide and produce
proteins.
In earlier studies, researchers had found that inherited Parkinson's is caused
by mutations in the PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1) gene.
Parkinson's disease is a progressive disorder caused by degeneration of nerve
cells in the part of the brain that controls movement. First described as
"the shaking palsy" in 1817, it affects an estimated 500,000 Americans, with
50,000 new cases reported each year. It is the second most common
neurodegenerative disease; only Alzheimer's strikes more people.
The two reports appear in the May 3 online issue of Nature.
Both research teams showed that flies without a functional PINK1 gene have
defects in mitochondria that trigger muscle problems and, according to one
team, degeneration of neurons that produce dopamine.
In addition, both research groups show that the PINK1 protein acts upstream of
Parkin, another protein linked to the sporadic forms of Parkinson's. These
two proteins appear to act in a common pathway involved in maintaining
mitochondrial function.
"We found that when you remove PINK 1, the animals are alive, but they have
defects in mitochondria," said lead author of the first report Dr. Ming Guo,
an assistant professor of neurology at UCLA. "In addition, we found that
Parkin and PINK 1 function in the same pathway," she added.
In the second report, Korean researchers had similar findings.
"Our study, using Drosophila [fruit fly] model, revealed that two distinct
gene products, Parkin and PINK1, converge in a common pathway in maintaining
mitochondrial integrity and function in both muscles and dopamine neurons,"
said lead researcher Jongkyeong Chung, an associate professor in the
Department of Biological Sciences at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science
and Technology. "This clearly suggests that mitochondrial failure is the
central mechanism in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease."
"Our findings indicate that there may be a specific molecular target in the
PINK1-Parkin pathway," Chung said. "We believe that identification of this
target will bring significant insight into basic and clinical science to
develop effective drugs for Parkinson's disease."
There may be clinical implications to this finding, Guo confirmed. "If we
understand how the disease is brought on, it will help us develop more
therapies," she added. "If we can find drugs that can rescue these
mitochondrial functions, that would be a much better drug than the current
therapies that are targeted on dopamine replacement."
However, one expert doesn't think these findings will have any implications
for treatment in the near future.
"These findings probably won't have any immediate impact on treatment," said
Dr. Jon Stoessl, director of the Pacific Parkinson's Research Center at the
University of British Columbia, in Canada. "You can never be sure there will
be a direct therapeutic link in studies done in animal models."
"Because people have already suggested that mitochondrial function is
important in Parkinson's, this is not going to suggest a novel approach to
treatment, but it will strengthen the importance of searching for treatments
along these lines," Stoessl added.
More information
The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke can tell you more
about Parkinson's disease.

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