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Researchers find cause of Parkinson’s upends common beliefs

Parkinson's disease affects 1 percent to 2 percent of the population and is characterised by resting tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia

Researchers find cause of Parkinson’s upends common beliefs
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ILLINOIS: A new Northwestern Medicine study calls into question a commonly held belief about what causes Parkinson's disease. The first event that leads to Parkinson's disease is widely accepted to be dopaminergic neurodegeneration.

However, the new research suggests that a malfunction in the neuron's synapses — the tiny gap across which a neuron can send an impulse to another neuron — leads to dopamine deficits and precedes neurodegeneration.

Parkinson's disease affects 1 percent to 2 percent of the population and is characterised by resting tremor, rigidity, and bradykinesia (slowness of movement).

These motor symptoms are caused by the progressive loss of dopaminergic-neurons in the midbrain.

The findings, which will be published in Neuron, open up a new avenue for therapies, according to the researchers.

“We showed that dopaminergic synapses become dysfunctional before neuronal death occurs,” said lead author Dr. Dimitri Krainc, chair of neurology at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and director of the Simpson Querrey Center for Neurogenetics.

“Based on these findings, we hypothesize that targeting dysfunctional synapses before the neurons are degenerated may represent a better therapeutic strategy.”

The study investigated patient-derived midbrain neurons, which is critical because mouse and human dopamine neurons have a different physiology and findings in the mouse neurons are not translatable to humans, as highlighted in Krainc's research recently published in Science.

Northwestern scientists found that dopaminergic synapses are not functioning correctly in various genetic forms of Parkinson’s disease.

This work, together with other recent studies by Krainc’s lab, addresses one of the major gaps in the field: how different genes linked to Parkinson’s lead to degeneration of human dopaminergic-neurons.

Neuronal recycling plant Imagine two workers in a neuronal recycling plant. It’s their job to recycle mitochondria, the energy producers of the cell, that are too old or overworked.

If the dysfunctional mitochondria remain in the cell, they can cause cellular dysfunction. The process of recycling or removing these old mitochondria is called mitophagy.

The two workers in this recycling process are the genes Parkin and PINK1.

In a normal situation, PINK1 activates Parkin to move the old mitochondria into the path to be recycled or disposed of.

It has been well-established that people who carry mutations in both copies of either PINK1 or Parkin develop Parkinson’s disease because of ineffective mitophagy.

The story of two sisters whose disease helped advance Parkinson’s research Two sisters had the misfortune of being born without the PINK1 gene, because their parents were each missing a copy of the critical gene.

This put the sisters at high risk for Parkinson’s disease, but one sister was diagnosed at age 16, while the other was not diagnosed until she was 48. The reason for the disparity led to an important new discovery by Krainc and his group.

The sister who was diagnosed at 16 also had partial loss of Parkin, which, by itself, should not cause Parkinson’s.

“There must be a complete loss of Parkin to cause Parkinson’s disease. So, why did the sister with only a partial loss of Parkin get the disease more than 30 years earlier?” Krainc asked.

As a result, the scientists realized that Parkin has another important job that had previously been unknown. The gene also functions in a different pathway in the synaptic terminal — unrelated to its recycling work— where it controls dopamine release.

With this new understanding of what went wrong for the sister, Northwestern scientists saw a new opportunity to boost Parkin and the potential to prevent the degeneration of dopamine neurons.

“We discovered a new mechanism to activate Parkin in patient neurons,” Krainc said. “Now, we need to develop drugs that stimulate this pathway, correct synaptic dysfunction and hopefully prevent neuronal degeneration in Parkinson’s.”

ANI
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