## Abstract Autosomal recessive early‐onset Parkinsonism (AREP) has been associated with mutations in the __Parkin__, __PINK1__, __DJ‐1__, and __ATP13A2__ genes. We studied the prevalence of mutations in all four genes in 29 Chinese unrelated families with AREP using direct sequencing analysis and
Detection of Parkin (PARK2) and DJ1 (PARK7) mutations in early-onset Parkinson disease: Parkin mutation frequency depends on ethnic origin of patients
✍ Scribed by Ana Djarmati; Katja Hedrich; Marina Svetel; Nora Schäfer; Vladislava Juric; Slobodanka Vukosavic; Robert Hering; Olaf Riess; Stanka Romac; Christine Klein; Vladimir Kostic
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 59 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Mutations in the
Parkin (PARK2) and the DJ1 (PARK7) gene cause early-onset Parkinson disease (EOPD). We tested 75 Serbian EOPD patients for mutations in both genes by conventional mutational screening (SSCP/dHPLC/sequencing) to detect small sequence alterations and by gene dosage studies (quantitative PCR) to reveal deletions or multiplications of one or more exons. A compound heterozygous Parkin mutation (exon deletion and point mutation; [c.836_972del]+[c.1411C>T]; +1 is first nucleotide of GenBank AB009973.1) was identified in a patient who showed a relatively benign course after a disease onset at 41 years. Another case had a heterozygous exon deletion in DJ1 ([c.253_322del]+[?]) and presented with an age at onset of 45 years and a rapid disease course. In conclusion, Parkin mutations are surprisingly rare in our Serbian EOPD sample, suggesting that the mutation rate depends on the ethnic origin of the patients. Although DJ1 mutations appear to be rare, we confirm their role in EOPD and demonstrate the importance of gene dosage studies.
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