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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (
Parkinson's disease
)
63,064
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To better understand the pathogenesis of brain dysfunction in Gaucher disease (GD), we studied brain pathology in seven subjects with type 1 GD (four also exhibited parkinsonism and dementia), three with type 2 GD and four with type 3 GD. Unique pathologic patterns of disease involving the hippocampal CA2-4 regions and layer 4b of the calcarine cortex were identified. While these findings were common to all three GD phenotypes, the extent of the changes varied depending on the severity of disease. Cerebral cortical layers 3 and 5, hippocampal CA2-4, and layer 4b were involved in all GD patients. Neuronal loss predominated in both type 2 and type 3 patients with progressive myoclonic encephalopathy, whereas patients classified as type 1 GD had only astrogliosis. Adjacent regions and lamina, including hippocampal CA1 and calcarine lamina 4a and 4c were spared of pathology, highlighting the specificity of the vulnerability of selective neurons. Elevated
glucocerebrosidase
expression by immunohistochemistry was found in CA2-4. Hippocampal (45)Ca(2+) uptake autoradiography in rat brain was performed demonstrating that hippocampal CA2-4 neurons, rather than CA1 neurons, were calcium-induced calcium release sensitive (CICR-sensitive). These findings match recent biochemical studies linking elevated glucosylceramide levels to sensitization of CA2-4 RyaR receptors and 300% potentiation of neuronal CICR sensitivity. In two patients with type 1 GD and parkinsonism, numerous synuclein positive inclusions, similar to brainstem-type Lewy bodies found in
Parkinson disease
, were also found hippocampal CA2-4 neurons. These findings argue for a common cytotoxic mechanism linking aberrant
glucocerebrosidase
activity, neuronal cytotoxicity, and cytotoxic Lewy body formation in GD.
...
PMID:Neuropathology provides clues to the pathophysiology of Gaucher disease. 1523 32
Gaucher disease, the recessively inherited deficiency of the enzyme
glucocerebrosidase
and the most common sphingolipidosis, has both non-neurological and neuronopathic forms and a continuum of diverse clinical manifestations. Studies of genotype-phenotype correlations reveal significant genotypic heterogeneity among clinically similar patients, and vastly different phenotypes among patients with the same mutations. The region surrounding the
glucocerebrosidase
gene (GBA) on chromosome 1q is particularly gene-rich, with a highly homologous pseudogene sequence 16 kb downstream. Recombination events within the GBA locus contribute to the etiology of some mutations in Gaucher disease. Studies of patients with Gaucher disease and atypical manifestations, including parkinsonism, myoclonic epilepsy, cardiac involvement and collodion skin, seek to define other genetic or environmental factors contributing to the phenotypes. Recent reports demonstrating an association between Gaucher disease and parkinsonism provide an example of heterozygosity for a Mendelian disorder acting as a risk factor for a complex disease. There are rare patients with Gaucher disease and differing genotypes who develop early onset, treatment-refractory parkinsonism. Neuropathology in a group of these patients showed alpha-synuclein-reactive Lewy bodies in brain regions specifically associated with Gaucher disease. Family studies of these probands suggested that the incidence of parkinsonism might be more frequent in obligate heterozygotes. In a complementary finding, the examination of GBA in autopsy samples from individuals with sporadic
Parkinson disease
identified alterations in the GBA sequence in 14% of the cohort. These studies provide evidence that altered
glucocerebrosidase
may contribute to a vulnerability to parkinsonism. Moreover, this research demonstrates how insights from rare, single gene disorders like Gaucher disease can provide a window into the etiology of more common, multifactorial genetic diseases.
...
PMID:Gaucher disease: complexity in a "simple" disorder. 1546 15
Parkinson's disease
(PD) is a common progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized clinically by a combination of motor symptoms. Identifying novel PD genetic risk factors is important for understanding its pathogenesis. A recent study suggested that up to 21% of subjects with PD may have mutations in the
glucocerebrosidase
(
GBA
) gene. We investigated the
GBA
gene for mutations in 88 PD cases and 122 normal controls and detected the presence of heterozygous
GBA
mutations in 5 PD cases and in 1 control. Sequencing of the entire open reading frame of the
GBA
gene in a subset of 25 cases with early-onset PD (<50 years of age) uncovered no additional mutations. Our results demonstrate a marginally significant association of
GBA
mutations with PD and suggest that variations in the
GBA
gene may constitute a rare susceptibility factor for PD (P = 0.048).
...
PMID:Analysis of the glucocerebrosidase gene in Parkinson's disease. 1551 92
Genetically-derived neurodegenerative disorders offer a rare opportunity to test validity of neuropathological criteria for diagnosis. Implications regarding an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder (
PARK
8) in which four different neuropathological diagnoses were found at autopsy are discussed. We suggest that just as there is currently no clinical 'gold standard' for
Parkinson's disease
, there is no pathological 'gold standard.' We conclude that in certain circumstances genetic studies may provide definitive arbitration of validity of clinical and pathological diagnostic criteria.
...
PMID:Is the neuropathological 'gold standard' diagnosis dead? Implications of clinicopathological findings in an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder. 1554 4
An association between Gaucher disease and
Parkinson disease
has been demonstrated by the concurrence of Gaucher disease and parkinsonism in rare patients and the identification of
glucocerebrosidase
mutations in probands with sporadic
Parkinson disease
. Using a different and complementary approach, we describe 10 unrelated families of subjects with Gaucher disease where obligate or confirmed carriers of
glucocerebrosidase
mutations developed parkinsonism. These observations indicate that mutant
glucocerebrosidase
, even in heterozygotes, may be a risk factor for the development of parkinsonism. Understanding the relationship between altered
glucocerebrosidase
and the development of parkinsonian manifestations will provide insights into the genetics, pathogenesis, and treatment of
Parkinson disease
.
...
PMID:Parkinsonism among Gaucher disease carriers. 1559 Dec 80
Mutations in the
glucocerebrosidase
(
GBA
) gene have been recently identified as contributory to
Parkinson disease
(PD) in Ashkenazi Jews. In the present study, the clinical characteristics of Ashkenazi patients with PD with
GBA
mutations (n = 40) were compared to those of Ashkenazi patients with PD without any known
GBA
mutation (n = 108). The overall clinical manifestations and age at disease onset did not differ in patients with
GBA
mutations compared to patients without mutations.
...
PMID:Mutations in the glucocerebrosidase gene and Parkinson disease: phenotype-genotype correlation. 1614 63
We have used brain tissue from clinically well-documented and neuropathologically confirmed cases of sporadic
Parkinson's disease
to establish the transcriptomic expression profile of the medial and lateral substantia nigra. In addition, the superior frontal cortex was analyzed in a subset of the same cases. DNA oligonucleotide microarrays were employed, which provide whole human genome coverage. A total of 570 genes were found to be differentially regulated at a high level of significance. A large number of differentially regulated expressed sequence tags were also identified. Levels of mRNA sequences encoded by genes of key interest were validated by means of quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Comparing three different normalization procedures, results based on the recently published GeneChip Robust Multi Array algorithm were found to be the most accurate predictor of real-time PCR results. Several new candidate genes which map to
PARK
loci are reported. In addition, the DNAJ family of chaperones is discussed in the context of
Parkinson's disease
pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Whole genome expression profiling of the medial and lateral substantia nigra in Parkinson's disease. 1634 56
An association between mutations in the
glucocerebrosidase
(
GBA
) gene and
Parkinson disease
(PD) was recently reported in Ashkenazi Jews. The authors screened a series of 311 Norwegian patients with PD and 474 controls for 2 common functional mutations of the
GBA
protein, N370S and L444P. Seven patients (2.3%) and 8 controls (1.7%) carried a mutant
GBA
allele (p = 0.58). This study does not indicate increased susceptibility to PD in
GBA
mutations carriers in Norway.
...
PMID:Glucocerebrosidase gene mutations and Parkinson disease in the Norwegian population. 1647 43
Alteration G2019S in the leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 gene (LRRK2) has been identified in several populations of patients with parkinsonism, including Ashkenazi Jewish subjects with
Parkinson disease
. Mutations in
glucocerebrosidase
(
GBA
), the enzyme deficient in Gaucher disease, are also identified at an increased frequency among Parkinson probands, including those of Ashkenazi Jewish ancestry. A Taqman Assay-by-Design SNP genotyping strategy was utilized to establish whether G2019S was found in association with
GBA
mutations. Among 37 subjects with parkinsonism who were heterozygous for a
GBA
mutation, none carried G2019S. Furthermore, G2019S was not found in 18 patients with Gaucher disease who developed parkinsonian manifestations and 11 other Gaucher probands with parkinsonism in a first degree relative. Among 45 patients with Gaucher disease without a history of parkinsonism, one G2019S carrier was found. These findings suggest that
GBA
and LRRK2 mutations are discrete risk factors for parkinsonism in both Ashkenazi Jewish and non-Jewish subjects.
...
PMID:Glucocerebrosidase mutations are not found in association with LRRK2 G2019S in subjects with parkinsonism. 1678 Oct 64
The synucleinopathies are neurodegenerative disorders defined by inclusions composed of aberrantly fibrillized alpha-synuclein, but factors contributing to this process remain largely unknown. The authors examined the
glucocerebrosidase
gene in 75 autopsy specimens with different synucleinopathies and identified mutations in 23% of cases of dementia with Lewy bodies, expanding on previous findings in subjects with
Parkinson disease
. Mutations in this lysosomal protein may interfere with the clearance or promote aggregation of alpha-synuclein.
...
PMID:Glucocerebrosidase mutations are an important risk factor for Lewy body disorders. 1679 Jun 5
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