| Literature DB >> 15349871 |
Christan F Rohé1, Pasquale Montagna, Guido Breedveld, Pietro Cortelli, Ben A Oostra, Vincenzo Bonifati.
Abstract
Two homozygous mutations in the PINK1 gene, encoding a mitochondrial putative protein kinase, recently have been identified in families with PARK6-linked, autosomal recessive early-onset parkinsonism (AREP). Here, we describe a novel homozygous mutation (1573_1574 insTTAG) identified in an AREP patient, which causes a frameshift and truncation at the C-terminus of the PINK1 protein, outside the kinase catalytic domain. The clinical phenotype includes early-onset (28 years) parkinsonism, foot dystonia at onset, good levodopa response, slow progression, early levodopa-induced dyskinesias, and sleep benefit, thereby resembling closely parkin-related disease. These findings confirm that recessive mutations in PINK1 cause early-onset parkinsonism and expand the associated clinical phenotype.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15349871 DOI: 10.1002/ana.20247
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Neurol ISSN: 0364-5134 Impact factor: 10.422