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In a message dated 16/06/2007 07:11:42 GMT Standard Time,  [log in to unmask]
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Mayo  researchers find gene pattern affecting Parkinson's
by Sea Stachura,  Minnesota Public Radio
June 15, 2007
Researchers at the Mayo Clinic may  have found gene patterns that make a
person 90 times more likely to develop  Parkinson's disease. The findings likely
have implications for other diseases,  such as Alzheimer's and schizophrenia.

St. Paul, Minn. - Dr. Demetrius  Maraganore did what most disease researchers
do when they're searching for  genetic links in a disease: he took it one
gene at a time. But no matter what  gene he looked at, his findings weren't that
conclusive.

"If I told  you your risk for Parkinson's disease was 4 percent instead of 2
percent, that  wouldn't motivate you to change your behaviors very much,"
according to  Maraganore.

He had found one gene that made a person about 2 percent  more likely to get
Parkinson's. Maraganore wondered, "why that gene?" If that  gene mutates, why
does that make a person more likely to get Parkinson's? This  gene is actually
a chemical that helps create neurological connections. Those  make the brain
function.

"That isn't a random process," he points out.  "This wiring is very detailed.
And as it turns out, there are chemicals that  guide this wiring process
during brain development."

The gene  Maraganore found is part of a series of genes that make up what's
called the  axon guidance pathway, or the wiring pathway. Maraganore looked at
the group  collectively when there were multiple gene mutations or mistakes.
Bingo.

"The findings were stunning. We found that common variations in axon
guidance pathway genes -- or brain wiring genes -- resulted in a 90-times  increase
risk for Parkinson's disease," he says.

Maraganore says these  results, statistically speaking, are conclusive, but
he'll do further research  on global populations.

Gene mutation is known for causing disease, but  that doesn't mean
Parkinson's is hereditary. Until now, researchers have  looked at pesticide exposure,
for example, as a possible environmental cause  of the disease. But Maraganore
says researchers should look at fetal  development. He says brain wiring takes
place in-utero. He wonders if maternal  health factors might affect that
wiring.

"If your mother was exposed  to pesticides or not while she was pregnant with
you, if your mother had an  infection when you she was pregnant with you, if
your mother smoked or drank  coffee, how might those factors similarly alter
the mapping of the brain and  how might that also contribute to Parkinson's
disease?" Maraganore says.

Maraganore says these findings may be useful in looking at other  conditions
like schizophrenia, Alzheimer's and dyslexia.

He says this  finding ccould be used on middle- age men and women today. He's
developing a  clinical blood test that would determine whether a person is
genetically  predisposed to the disease, and to what severity.

"We're right there,"  he says. "The patents have been filed. We're in the
process of doing the fine  finishing to show that this is really a useful test
for patients and clinics  worldwide."

Maraganore says he is working with a team on a drug  treatment for the
disease if the genetic tests are positive. He says that  treatment is about five
years away.


Rayilyn Brown
Board Member  AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson's  Foundation

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Does that mean it follows geographical or racial lines ?






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