Print

Print


Sun Feb 1, 5:12 pm ET
 AFP/File - A computer image mapping parts of the brain. Manganese, a metal 
that is naturally present in the human .
PARIS (AFP) - Manganese, a metal that is naturally present in the human 
body, may contribute to Parkinson's disease when defective genes interact to 
enhance its toxicity, according to a study published Sunday.
Parkinson's attacks the nervous system and is characterized by the loss of 
cells which produce dopamine, a critically important neurotransmitter that 
ferries chemical messages within the brain.
Symptoms include muscular rigidity, difficulty with initiating movements, 
lack of balance, and slowness of voluntary actions.
In experiments on yeast cells, researchers showed that the toxicity caused 
by an over-abundance of a protein, alpha-synuclein, previously linked to the 
disease is greatly reduced in the presence of a second protein, known as 
ATP13A2.
The latter is thought to play a role in transporting metal molecules, 
especially manganese, a known risk factor for Parkinson's.
Manganese is an essential trace nutrient in virtually all forms of life. The 
human body contains about 10 milligrammes, stored mainly in the liver and 
kidneys.
A team led by Susan Lindquist at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute in 
Cambridge, Massachusetts demonstrated that yeast cells lacking ATP13A2 were 
more sensitive to the metal.
They were able to duplicate the same genetic interaction in laboratory-grown 
rat neurons.
Their findings, published in Nature Genetics, a publication of the Nature 
Publishing Group, suggest that humans with mutations in the genes encoding 
these proteins may be particularly vulnerable to manganese poisoning.
A neurodegenerative condition similar to Parkinson's -- often called 
"manganism" -- has been linked to manganese exposure amongst miners and 
welders.
Manganese exposure is regulated by the US Occupational Safety and Health 
Administration.
Meanwhile, in another study published in Nature Genetics, researchers 
identified the first genetic variant ever linked to the condition known as 
essential tremor.
Like Parkinson's, essential tremor is a degenerative neurological disease 
characterised by tremor of the arms and hands that can impair writing, 
drinking, eating and other everyday activities.
Earlier studies suggested that the condition may occur in as many as 13 
percent of persons over 65.
Researchers led by Kari Stefansson of deCODE Genetics, a company based in 
Reykjavik, Iceland, compared the genomes of 452 essential tremor patients 
from Iceland against a control group of 14,394 persons.
They found that a specific variant in the gene known as LINGO1 was strongly 
linked to the disease.
LINGO1 is involved in cell-to-cell interactions within the nervous system, 
and is known to regulate neuron survival.
Inhibiting the gene's activity has been shown to improve neurological 
function in test animals, and could be a promising path for new drug 
treatments.

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
[log in to unmask] 

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn