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Discovery
in a rare Brain Disorder suggests a common
mechanism may underlie many
Neurodegenerative Diseases
Newswise — A Mayo Clinic-led international
consortium has found a mechanism that may
help explain Parkinson’s and other
neurological disorders.
Studying just eight families worldwide, the
international team of researchers have
discovered a genetic defect that results in
profound depression and parkinsonism in a
disorder known as Perry syndrome.
Although this syndrome is exceedingly rare,
the mechanism implicated in it may help
explain the origins of a variety of
neurodegenerative disorders, such as
Parkinson’s and amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis diseases, and even common
depression and sleep disorders that are also
hallmarks of the disorder, the researchers
say.
In the study, to be published in the
February issue of Nature Genetics (online
January 11), the researchers report that
people with Perry syndrome have mutations in
a subunit of the dynactin complex (DCTN1;
p150glued), which is essential to the
movement of molecular “cargo” inside brain
cells, or neurons.
In this case, the mutations meant that the
cargo was being driven on a “train” that
essentially had faulty brakes. And because
Perry syndrome resembles many other
neurodegenerative diseases, the findings
suggest breakdowns along the cell’s interior
transportation grid may be a common
mechanism underlying neurodegeneration.
“Understanding why distinct neurons are
selectively vulnerable to neurodegeneration
in different brain disorders is one of the
greatest puzzles in neuroscience,” says the
study’s lead investigator, Matthew J. Farrer,
Ph.D., a professor of neuroscience at Mayo
Clinic.
“These findings suggest that trafficking of
specific cargoes inside brain cells may be a
general problem in a variety of
neurodegenerative diseases, depression, and
other disorders.”
“It points us to a unified theory of what is
going wrong in many of them,” says the
study’s senior author, Zbigniew K. Wszolek,
M.D., professor of neurology at Mayo Clinic.
Molecules, vesicles and organelles within a
cell are constantly carried via a network of
crisscrossing microtubules that act like the
tracks of an elaborate railroad system.
Because, for the most part, neurons do not
regenerate or divide as do other cells in
the body, trafficking cargo efficiently over
the lifetime of a neuron is fundamentally
important, says Dr. Farrer.
Disruptions in this railroad system have
been seen in many neurodegenerative
diseases, but these problems have been
generally regarded as byproducts of the
disorder rather than the cause, the
researchers say. These new findings may
change that view, they say.
For example, in amyotrophic lateral
sclerosis (ALS), a motor neuron disease also
known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, the molecular
motors (for example, dynein, dynactin and
kinesin) that drive transport from distant
nerve terminals to the cell body may become
defective.
In some forms of Parkinson’s disease,
growing evidence indicates that the cargoes
being trafficked are also misdirected by
faulty signaling, due to pathogenic
mutations in the leucine-rich repeat kinase
2(LRRK2) gene, Dr. Farrer says.
The findings may also shed light on other
neurodegenerative disorders, the researchers
say.
In Alzheimer’s disease, frontotemporal
dementia and progressive supranuclear palsy,
for instance, the “spikes,” comprised of
microtubule associated protein tau (MAPT),
that normally stabilize and secure these
rails tend to fall apart.
This discovery would not have been possible
without a consortium of international
researchers including co-authors from
Canada, France, Japan, Turkey, and the
United Kingdom, says Dr. Wszolek, who
established the collaborative network of
scientists.
Perry syndrome was first described in two
unrelated Canadian families in 1975. In a
study published in 2007, Dr. Wszolek, along
with Swiss neurologist and visiting fellow
Christian Wider, M.D., summarized the
clinical features of the disease, which
include early-onset parkinsonism (stiffness,
slowness and rigidity), depression, severe
weight loss, and increasing difficulty in
breathing.
Once symptoms occur, typically in the
patient’s mid-40s, the disease is rapidly
progressive and fatal.
In a subsequent study published in August
2008, the consortium reported that eight
patients who died from the disease had
substantial loss of neurons in the midbrain
area known as the substantia nigra.
They also found a molecular signature of
Perry syndrome — “inclusions,” or clumps, of
a protein known as TDP-43 — which is found
in patients with frontotemporal dementia or
with motor neuron disease.
What these clumps represent is not known,
says co-author and neuropathologist Dennis
Dickson, M.D.
“But they are clearly a marker of the
disease process in all of these disorders,
suggesting a common process is perturbed,”
he says.
Mayo geneticists hypothesized that Perry
syndrome may be caused by mutations within
the same gene, even though families
afflicted with this disorder are unrelated,
and come from different continents.
The disease is autosomal dominant, meaning
that the chance of inheriting the disease is
50 percent if one parent carries a copy of a
mutant gene.
With the help and participation of eight
families with Perry syndrome, the Mayo-led
team set out to find the defective gene.
They determined that each family had one of
five novel mutations in the DCTN1 gene,
whose protein produces a large subunit of
the dynactin complex known as p150glued.
This protein is essential to the movement of
cargo along the microtubule rails.
“Curiously, the mutations all cluster in the
p150glued cytoskeleton-associated protein
glycine-rich domain and its ‘GKNDG’ binding
motif,” Dr. Farrer says.
“This region acts like a parking brake, so
Perry mutations in p150glued mean that this
brake is affected. It would be analogous to
driving that train with faulty brakes.”
What amazed the researchers are the
similarities that Perry syndrome shares with
other neurodegenerative diseases.
Perry mutations in DCTN1 are physically very
close to a mutation previously reported in
familial motor neuron disease, they say.
The deposits of TDP43 are also the same as
found in motor neuron disease and in some
forms of frontotemporal dementia, although
they are in a different part of the brain.
“With the discovery of mutations in Perry
syndrome, researchers have a new means to
explore the breakdown in the microtubule
transport system in each of these diseases,”
says Dr. Farrer.
“The insides of neurons are very dynamic.
Molecules and organelles are constantly
being moved to where they are needed, so it
makes sense that these disorders, with
aging, may be caused by a progressive
breakdown in this transport system.”
Understanding Perry syndrome may shed light
on depression as well as metabolic
syndromes, says Dr. Wszolek.
Many of the patients have profound
depression and about one-third of those
commit suicide. Many of the patients also
experience severe weight loss and sleep
deprivation.
The study was funded by the Pacific
Alzheimer Research Foundation of British
Columbia, Canada, and the National Institute
of Neurological Disorders and Strokes, which
funds the Morris K. Udall Parkinson’s
Disease Research Center of Excellence at
Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville.
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