-
Views
-
Cite
Cite
Alexandra Dumitriu, Chris D. Pacheco, Jemma B. Wilk, Katherine E. Strathearn, Jeanne C. Latourelle, Stefano Goldwurm, Gianni Pezzoli, Jean-Christophe Rochet, Susan Lindquist, Richard H. Myers, Cyclin-G-associated kinase modifies α-synuclein expression levels and toxicity in Parkinson's disease: results from the GenePD Study, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 20, Issue 8, 15 April 2011, Pages 1478–1487, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddr026
- Share Icon Share
Abstract
Although family history is a well-established risk factor for Parkinson's disease (PD), fewer than 5% of PD cases can be attributed to known genetic mutations. The etiology for the remainder of PD cases is unclear; however, neuronal accumulation of the protein α-synuclein is common to nearly all patients, implicating pathways that influence α-synuclein in PD pathogenesis. We report a genome-wide significant association (P = 3.97 × 10−8) between a polymorphism, rs1564282, in the cyclin-G-associated kinase (GAK) gene and increased PD risk, with a meta-analysis odds ratio of 1.48. This association result is based on the meta-analysis of three publicly available PD case–control genome-wide association study and genotyping from a new, independent Italian cohort. Microarray expression analysis of post-mortem frontal cortex from PD and control brains demonstrates a significant association between rs1564282 and higher α-synuclein expression, a known cause of early onset PD. Functional knockdown of GAK in cell culture causes a significant increase in toxicity when α-synuclein is over-expressed. Furthermore, knockdown of GAK in rat primary neurons expressing the A53T mutation of α-synuclein, a well-established model for PD, decreases cell viability. These observations provide evidence that GAK is associated with PD risk and suggest that GAK and α-synuclein interact in a pathway involved in PD pathogenesis. The GAK protein, a serine/threonine kinase, belongs to a family of proteins commonly targeted for drug development. This, combined with GAK's observed relationship to the levels of α-synuclein expression and toxicity, suggests that the protein is an attractive therapeutic target for the treatment of PD.
- parkinson disease
- cell culture techniques
- mutation
- adenoviruses
- polymorphism
- cell survival
- cyclins
- genes
- genome
- neurons
- phosphotransferases
- single nucleotide polymorphism
- protein-serine-threonine kinases
- staphylococcal protein a
- brain
- frontal lobe
- rats
- toxic effect
- alpha-synuclein
- drug development
- genotype determination
- genome-wide association study
- causality
- symptom onset