| Literature DB >> 26942284 |
Suzanne Lesage1, Valérie Drouet1, Elisa Majounie2, Vincent Deramecourt3, Maxime Jacoupy1, Aude Nicolas1, Florence Cormier-Dequaire4, Sidi Mohamed Hassoun1, Claire Pujol1, Sorana Ciura1, Zoi Erpapazoglou1, Tatiana Usenko1, Claude-Alain Maurage3, Mourad Sahbatou5, Stefan Liebau6, Jinhui Ding2, Basar Bilgic7, Murat Emre7, Nihan Erginel-Unaltuna8, Gamze Guven8, François Tison9, Christine Tranchant10, Marie Vidailhet11, Jean-Christophe Corvol4, Paul Krack12, Anne-Louise Leutenegger13, Michael A Nalls2, Dena G Hernandez2, Peter Heutink14, J Raphael Gibbs2, John Hardy15, Nicholas W Wood15, Thomas Gasser14, Alexandra Durr16, Jean-François Deleuze17, Meriem Tazir18, Alain Destée19, Ebba Lohmann20, Edor Kabashi1, Andrew Singleton2, Olga Corti21, Alexis Brice22.
Abstract
Autosomal-recessive early-onset parkinsonism is clinically and genetically heterogeneous. The genetic causes of approximately 50% of autosomal-recessive early-onset forms of Parkinson disease (PD) remain to be elucidated. Homozygozity mapping and exome sequencing in 62 isolated individuals with early-onset parkinsonism and confirmed consanguinity followed by data mining in the exomes of 1,348 PD-affected individuals identified, in three isolated subjects, homozygous or compound heterozygous truncating mutations in vacuolar protein sorting 13C (VPS13C). VPS13C mutations are associated with a distinct form of early-onset parkinsonism characterized by rapid and severe disease progression and early cognitive decline; the pathological features were striking and reminiscent of diffuse Lewy body disease. In cell models, VPS13C partly localized to the outer membrane of mitochondria. Silencing of VPS13C was associated with lower mitochondrial membrane potential, mitochondrial fragmentation, increased respiration rates, exacerbated PINK1/Parkin-dependent mitophagy, and transcriptional upregulation of PARK2 in response to mitochondrial damage. This work suggests that loss of function of VPS13C is a cause of autosomal-recessive early-onset parkinsonism with a distinctive phenotype of rapid and severe progression.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26942284 PMCID: PMC4800038 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.01.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025