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Mutation analysis of the parkin and PINK1 genes in American Caucasian early-onset Parkinson disease families.

by Hao Deng, Weidong Le, Joohi Shahed, Wenjie Xie, Joseph Jankovic
Neuroscience Letters (2008)

Abstract

Mutations in the parkin gene and the PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 gene (PINK1) have been identified as the most common causes of autosomal recessive early-onset Parkinson disease (EOPD). To investigate the presence of the parkin and PINK1 gene mutation(s) and to explore genotype-phenotype correlations in American Caucasian families with EOPD from North American, we screened these two genes in probands of six families by direct sequencing, semi-quantitative PCR and RT-PCR. No PINK1 gene mutation was found in any of the probands, but compound heterozygous mutations (EX 3 del and EX 34 del) in the parkin gene were identified in one family. Extended analysis of the parkin-positive family showed the phenotype of patients was that of classic autosomal recessive EOPD, characterized by early age at onset, slow progression, beneficial response to levodopa, and levodopa-related motor complications. Three heterozygous mutation carriers (EX 3 del or EX 34 del) were free of any neurological symptoms. None of 62 healthy controls harbored EX 3 del or EX 34 del mutation. Our data suggest that compound heterozygous mutations (EX 3 and EX 34 del) in the parkin gene were the cause of EOPD in one of six Caucasian families; heterozygous EX 3 del and heterozygous EX 34 del forms were insufficient to cause this disorder, consistent with a loss-of-function mechanism of the parkin mutations. The results may provide new insights into the cause and diagnosis of PD and have implications for genetic counseling.

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