Testing the Protein Propagation Hypothesis of Parkinson Disease

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Abstract

One of the most exciting recent hypotheses in neurology is that most neurodegenerative diseases are caused by the neuron to neuron propagation of prion-like misfolded proteins. In Parkinson disease, the theory initially emerged from postmortem studies demonstrating a caudal-rostral progression of pathology from lower brainstem to neocortex. Later, animal studies showed that the hallmark protein of PD, α-synuclein, exhibited all the characteristics of a prion. Here, we describe our work using human neuroimaging to test the theory that PD pathology advances via a propagating process along the connectome. We found that the pattern and progression of brain atrophy follow neuronal connectivity, correlate with clinical features, and identify an epicenter in the brainstem.

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Dagher, A., & Zeighami, Y. (2018, July 10). Testing the Protein Propagation Hypothesis of Parkinson Disease. Journal of Experimental Neuroscience. SAGE Publications Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1177/1179069518786715

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