Translated mutation in the Nurr1 gene as a cause for Parkinson's disease
β Scribed by David A. Grimes; Fabin Han; Michel Panisset; Lemuel Racacho; Fengxia Xiao; Ruobing Zou; Kelly Westaff; Dennis E. Bulman
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 106 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-3185
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Multiple genes have been now identified as causing Parkinson's disease (PD). In 2003, two mutations were identified in exon 1 of the Nurr1 gene in 10 of 107 individuals with familial PD. To date, investigators have only focused on screening for these known mutations of the Nurr1 gene. All individuals were recruited from two Parkinson's disease clinics in Canada. Following PCR amplification of each exon of the Nurr1 gene, samples underwent denaturing highβperformance liquid chromatography (DHPLC) analysis. Ten individuals also underwent direct sequencing as well as any samples where variants were identified. The Nurr1 gene was evaluated for 202 PD individuals, 37% of whom had at least one relative with PD and 100 control nonβPD individuals. Using DHPLC and direct sequencing, we did not detect any sequence variants in exon 1. Variants in amplicon 6 were seen and direct sequencing confirmed a known NI6P polymorphism in intron 6. Novel polymorphisms were also identified in exon 3 and intron 5. A novel mutation was identified in exon 3 in one nonfamilial PD individual. This heterozygous CβtoβG transversion resulted in a serineβtoβcysteine substitution and was not identified in any of the other 602 chromosomes screened. Mutations in the Nurr1 gene in our large cohort of familial and sporadic PD individuals are rare. The novel mutation in exon 3 is predicted to affect phosphorylation and functional studies to assess this are underway. This is the first coding mutation identified in the Nurr1 gene for Parkinson's disease. Β© 2006 Movement Disorder Society
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