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http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/abstract/0508189103v1

A functional variant of the dopamine D3 receptor is associated with risk and
age-at-onset of essential tremor

Familial essential tremor (ET), the most common inherited movement disorder,
is generally transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait. A genome-wide scan
for ET revealed one major locus on chromosome 3q13. Here, we report that the
Ser9Gly variant in the dopamine D3 receptor gene (DRD3), localized on 3q13.3,
is associated and cosegregates with familial ET in 23 out of 30 French
families. Sequencing revealed no other nonsynonymous variants in the
DRD3-coding sequence and in the first 871 bp of the 5' flanking region.
Moreover, Gly-9 homozygous patients presented with more severe and/or earlier
onset forms of the disease than heterozygotes. A replication study comparing
276 patients with ET and 184 normal controls confirmed the association of the
Gly-9 variant with risk and age-at-onset of ET. In human embryonic kidney
(HEK) 293-transfected cells, the Gly-9 variant did not differ from the Ser-9
variant with respect to glycosylation and to anterograde and retrograde
trafficking, but dopamine had an affinity that was four to five times higher.
With the Gly-9 variant, the dopamine-mediated cAMP response was increased,
and the mitogen-associated protein kinase (MAPK) signal was prolonged, as
compared with the Ser-9 variant. The gain-of-function produced by the Gly-9
variant may explain why drugs active against tremor in Parkinson's disease
(PD) are usually not effective in the treatment of ET and suggests that DRD3
partial agonists or antagonists should be considered as novel therapeutic
options for patients with ET.

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