| Literature DB >> 25434005 |
Gabrielle R Wilson1, Joe C H Sim2, Catriona McLean3, Maila Giannandrea4, Charles A Galea5, Jessica R Riseley2, Sarah E M Stephenson1, Elizabeth Fitzpatrick2, Stefan A Haas6, Kate Pope2, Kirk J Hogan7, Ronald G Gregg8, Catherine J Bromhead9, David S Wargowski10, Christopher H Lawrence11, Paul A James12, Andrew Churchyard13, Yujing Gao2, Dean G Phelan1, Greta Gillies2, Nicholas Salce2, Lynn Stanford14, Ashley P L Marsh1, Maria L Mignogna4, Susan J Hayflick14, Richard J Leventer15, Martin B Delatycki16, George D Mellick17, Vera M Kalscheuer18, Patrizia D'Adamo19, Melanie Bahlo20, David J Amor1, Paul J Lockhart21.
Abstract
Advances in understanding the etiology of Parkinson disease have been driven by the identification of causative mutations in families. Genetic analysis of an Australian family with three males displaying clinical features of early-onset parkinsonism and intellectual disability identified a ∼45 kb deletion resulting in the complete loss of RAB39B. We subsequently identified a missense mutation (c.503C>A [p.Thr168Lys]) in RAB39B in an unrelated Wisconsin kindred affected by a similar clinical phenotype. In silico and in vitro studies demonstrated that the mutation destabilized the protein, consistent with loss of function. In vitro small-hairpin-RNA-mediated knockdown of Rab39b resulted in a reduction in the density of α-synuclein immunoreactive puncta in dendritic processes of cultured neurons. In addition, in multiple cell models, we demonstrated that knockdown of Rab39b was associated with reduced steady-state levels of α-synuclein. Post mortem studies demonstrated that loss of RAB39B resulted in pathologically confirmed Parkinson disease. There was extensive dopaminergic neuron loss in the substantia nigra and widespread classic Lewy body pathology. Additional pathological features included cortical Lewy bodies, brain iron accumulation, tau immunoreactivity, and axonal spheroids. Overall, we have shown that loss-of-function mutations in RAB39B cause intellectual disability and pathologically confirmed early-onset Parkinson disease. The loss of RAB39B results in dysregulation of α-synuclein homeostasis and a spectrum of neuropathological features that implicate RAB39B in the pathogenesis of Parkinson disease and potentially other neurodegenerative disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25434005 PMCID: PMC4259921 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.10.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025