| Literature DB >> 27896429 |
Valentina La Cognata1,2, Giovanna Morello1, Velia D'Agata2, Sebastiano Cavallaro3.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD), the second most common progressive neurodegenerative disorder of aging, was long believed to be a non-genetic sporadic origin syndrome. The proof that several genetic loci are responsible for rare Mendelian forms has represented a revolutionary breakthrough, enabling to reveal molecular mechanisms underlying this debilitating still incurable condition. While single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and small indels constitute the most commonly investigated DNA variations accounting for only a limited number of PD cases, larger genomic molecular rearrangements have emerged as significant PD-causing mutations, including submicroscopic Copy Number Variations (CNVs). CNVs constitute a prevalent source of genomic variations and substantially participate in each individual's genomic makeup and phenotypic outcome. However, the majority of genetic studies have focused their attention on single candidate-gene mutations or on common variants reaching a significant statistical level of acceptance. This gene-centric approach is insufficient to uncover the genetic background of polygenic multifactorial disorders like PD, and potentially masks rare individual CNVs that all together might contribute to disease development or progression. In this review, we will discuss literature and bioinformatic data describing the involvement of CNVs on PD pathobiology. We will analyze the most frequent copy number changes in familiar PD genes and provide a "systems biology" overview of rare individual rearrangements that could functionally act on commonly deregulated molecular pathways. Assessing the global genome-wide burden of CNVs in PD patients may reveal new disease-related molecular mechanisms, and open the window to a new possible genetic scenario in the unsolved PD puzzle.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27896429 PMCID: PMC5214768 DOI: 10.1007/s00439-016-1749-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Genet ISSN: 0340-6717 Impact factor: 4.132
Fig. 1Schematic representation of molecular elements and common altered pathways underlying the complex PD puzzle
Fig. 2CNVs can be measured by a spectrum of laboratory methods targeting specific locations on chromosomes (locus-specific levels), or the whole genome (genome-wide level). These numerous methodologies are characterized by different levels of resolutions. The locus-specific techniques encompass (1) PCR-based strategies, such as quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR), Multiplex Ligand Probe Amplification (MLPA) or multiplex amplifiable probe hybridization (MAPH); (2) the Fluorescence in situ Hybridization (FISH) assays and (3) the RFLP (restriction fragment length polymorphism—Southern blot analysis. The whole-genome methodologies include (1) the classical chromosomal G-bandage (karyotyping); (2) the aCGH (Comparative Genomic Hybridization array) platforms and (3) the NGS (Next-Generation sequencing) technology. These two latter are increasingly replacing both the classical detections methods and the locus-specific techniques
Fig. 3Schematic illustration of the three most common events causing genomic rearrangements. a NAHR generates CNVs when genomic segments with high sequence similarity (direct low-copy repeats sequences, green arrows) recombine. This recombination can generate a duplication of the similar locus (red arrow) on one chromosome, while removing the copy from the other. b Double-stranded breaks (DBS) in DNA sequence recruit NHEJ-associated proteins to repair and ligate DNA strands together. First, end-repair protein replaces lost nucleotides on the double-strand break and DNA ligase associates broken DNA fragments together. If fragments from different chromosomes ligate together, duplications or deletions of sequence can occur. c After the original stalling of the replication fork (black line), the lagging strand disengages and anneals to a second fork (blue line), followed by extension of the now ‘primed’ second fork and DNA synthesis. After the fork disengages, the tethered original fork with its lagging strand (black and blue lines) could invade a third fork (green line). Serial replication fork disengaging and lagging strand invasion could occur several times (e.g., FoSTeS × 2, FoSTeS × 3, etc.) before resumption of replication on the original template. It should be noted that the CNVs created through FoSTeS are difficult to be distinguished from those generated by micro-homology-mediated breakpoint-induced repair (MMBIR), a mechanism of end-joining that relies on small-scale homology of DNA sequence at the ends of DSBs
All the current studies describing SNCA copy number changes in PD
| CNVs in α-synuclein gene in PD | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNV type | Size | Ethnicity | Phenotype | Methodology | F–S–D | References |
| Triplication (Spellman–Muenter family or Iowa Kindred) | 1.61–2.04 Mb | Iowa | PD and dementia with LBs | qPCR, FISH | F | Singleton et al. ( |
| Duplication (Lister Family, branch J) | 0.7987–0.9359 Mb | Sweden, United States | Late-onset parkinsonism and early dysautonomia | qPCR; Microsatellite markers analysis; Affymetrix 250 K microarray | F | Farrer et al. ( |
| Triplication (Lister Family, Swedish-America, Branch I) | Early-onset parkinsonism with dementia and dysautonomia | |||||
| Duplication (Ikeuchi family) | 5 Mb | Japan | Progressive parkinsonism with dementia with LBs | Microsatellite markers analysis, qPCR | F | Ikeuchi et al. ( |
| Homozygous duplication (Ikeuchi family—consanguineous marriage) | ||||||
| Duplication (Uchiyama family) | 0.5–1.6 Mb | Japan | Parkinsonism with dementia with LBs | qPCR | F | Uchiyama et al. ( |
| Duplication | n.a. | Korea | Early-onset parkinsonism with rapidly progressive course, cognitive impairment, and dysautonomia (Ahn family) | Semi-quantitative multiplex PCR, FISH | F | Ahn et al. ( |
| Typical PD | S | |||||
| Duplication | n.a. | Germany | Early-onset parkinsonism | qPCR, MLPA | D | Brueggemann et al. ( |
| Duplication | n.a. | European and North African | Early-onset PD | MLPA, Microsatellite markers analysis | S | Troiano et al. ( |
| Duplication (Family A) | 0.6 Mb | Japan | Parkinsonism with or without dementia | Microsatellite markers analysis, qPCR, FISH, aCGH (BACS and Affymetrix) | F | Nishioka et al. ( |
| Duplication (Family B) | 0.4 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (Family C) | 0.4 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (Family D) | 0.4 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (Family E) | 0.2 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (Family F) | 0.6 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (Family G) | 0.6 Mb | |||||
| Triplication (FPD-014) (Pat 011) | 2.61–2.64 Mb | France. Italy | Atypical autosomal dominant parkinsonism | Semi-quantitative Multiplex PCR, Microsatellite analysis, Affymetrix GeneChip Human Mapping 250 K microarray (just for P59 family: FISH, 44 k CGH arrays Agilent) | F | Chartier-Harlin et al. ( |
| Duplication (FPD-131 o P59) (Pat 024-022-026) | 4.928 Mb | Typical autosomal dominant PD | ||||
| Duplication (FPD-321) (Pat 021) | 3.47–3.58 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (FPD-410) (Pat 001) | 0.63–0.65 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (FPD-437) (Pat 010-012) | 0.42–0.43 Mb | |||||
| Duplication (Sironi family) | 3.65 Mb | Italy | PD with progression to dementia | MLPA, Agilent 105A chip | F | Sironi et al. ( |
| Duplication | n.a. | Belgium | Parkinsonian syndrome | Multiplex amplicon quantification, qPCR | S | Nuytemans et al. ( |
| Triplication (Keyser family) | n.a. | South African (French–Italian origin) | PD with dementia | MLPA, qPCR | F | Keyser et al. ( |
| Duplication | n.a. | Korea | PD with cognitive dysfunction | Semi-quantitative multiplex PCR | S | Shin et al. ( |
| Triplication | n.a. | Asian | Early-onset and severe clinical features of parkinsonism | qPCR, MLPA, microsatellite analysis | F | Sekine et al. ( |
| Duplication | 3 Mb | n.a. | PD | Illumina370Duo arrays | F | Pankratz et al. ( |
| Homozygous duplication | 0.928 Mb | Pakistan | Young-onset Parkinsonism | MLPA, Nimblegen 135 K-array CGH | F | Kojovic et al. ( |
| Duplication (Partial Trisomy 4q) | 41.2 MB | Belgium | Young-onset, dopa-responsive parkinsonism | Karyotype, aCGH, MLPA | D | Garraux et al. ( |
| Duplication | n.a. | Non-Hispanic Caucasian | Autosomal dominant Early-onset PD | Customized 4 × 72 k format CGH microarrays by NimbleGen; Taqman qPCR | F | Wang et al. ( |
| Duplication (family Elia A) | 773 Kb | Northern Argentina | Early-onset PD that was variably associated with nonmotor features, such as dysautonomia, cognitive deficits, and psychiatric disturbances | MLPA, qPCR, Affymetrix high-resolution single nucleotide polymorphism-array analysis | F | Elia et al. ( |
| Duplication (Family Elia B) | 4820 Kb | Italian | Early-onset PD dementia with psychiatric disturbances to late-onset PD with mild cognitive impairment | |||
| Duplication | 6.4 Mb | Caucasian English | Atypical clinical presentation strongly reminiscent of frontotemporal dementia and late-onset pallidopyramidal syndromes | MLPA, aCGH Agilent 8 × 60 K | F | Kara et al. ( |
| Duplication | n.a. | Iranian | PD typical clinical features | MLPA, qPCR | F–S | Darvish et al. ( |
| Triplication | PD with dementia | |||||
| Duplication (mosaicism) | n.a. | American mitochondrial haplogroup and European autosomal markers | Early-onset Parkinsonism | MLPA (no dosage alteration in buccal swab), FISH (no rearrangements in peripheral leukocytes; duplication—triplication in oral mucosa) | F–S | Perandones et al. ( |
| Duplication | n.a. | American | Parkinsonism with LBs and Lewy neurites | n.a. | n.a. | Konno et al. ( |
| Triplication | 1.3 Mb | Italian | Early-onset parkinsonism combined with depression, behavior disturbances, sleep disorders, and cognitive decline | Genome-wide SNP microarrays, FISH, MLPA | F | Olgiati et al. ( |
| Triplication | 351 Kb | Italian | Severe parkinsonism featuring early-onset dyskinesia, psychiatric symptoms, and cognitive deterioration | CGH-Array, MLPA, qPCR | F | Ferese et al. ( |
The CNVs mutation type, the size of the mutation, the ethnicity of patients, the phenotype and the methodological approaches to measure quantitative genomic variations are reported. The column F–S–D reports if described cases are familial, sporadic or de novo
Fig. 4Schematic representation of PARK2 genetic structure and currently identified CNVs in PD patients. All the canonical PARK2 exons are involved in exons rearrangements. Red bars correspond to exons deletions, blue bars to duplications and green bars to triplications. All depicted CNVs can be found at the Parkinson Disease Mutation database (http://www.molgen.vib-ua.be/PDMutDB)
All the current studies describing PINK1 copy number changes in PD
| CNVs overlapping PINK1 gene in PD | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNV type | Size | Ethnicity | Phenotype | Methodology | F–S | References |
| Homoz. deletion | Exons 6–8 | Japan | Early-onset PD + dementia | n.a. | F | Li et al. ( |
| Homoz. deletion | ~4600 bp | Japan | Early-onset PD | n.a. | n.a. | Atsumi et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | ~56 kb | Italy | Definite PD | qPCR, FISH, Microsatellite markers analysis | S | Marongiu et al. ( |
| Homoz. deletion | Exon 7 | Brazil | Early-onset PD | Sequencing, qPCR | S | Camargos et al. ( |
| Homoz. deletion | 8669 bp (exons 4–8) | Sudan | Early-onset PD | MLPA, sequencing | F | Cazeneuve et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | Exons 3-8 | China | Early-onset PD | qPCR | S | Guo et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | Exon 7 | Spanish | Early-onset PD with LBs | Sequencing, qPCR | F | Samaranch et al. ( |
| Compound heteroz. deletion | Exon 2 + exons 2–4 | Iran | Typical clinical features | MLPA, qPCR | S | Darvish et al. ( |
| Homoz. deletion | Exon 5 and exon 4 | Typical clinical features and PD with dementia | F | |||
| Heteroz. deletion | Exon 1 | Brazil | Early-onset PD | MLPA, qPCR | n.a. | Moura et al. ( |
The CNVs mutation type, the size of the mutation, the ethnicity of patients, the phenotype and the methodological approaches to measure quantitative genomic variations are reported. The column F–S reports if described cases are familial or sporadic
All the current studies describing PARK7 copy number changes in PD
| CNVs overlapping PARK7 gene in PD | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNV type | Size | Ethnicity | Phenotype | Methodology | F vs. S | References |
| Homoz. deletion | Exons 1–5 (14.082 bp) | Dutch | Autosomal recessive early-onset Parkinsonism | Microsatellite markers analysis, cloning, PCR, sequencing | F | Bonifati et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | Exons 5–7 | Caucasian (Tyrol, Austria) | Early-onset PD | Quantitative duplex PCR | S | Hedrich et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | Exon 5 | Serbian | Early-onset PD | qPCR | n.a. | Djarmati et al. ( |
| Heteroz. duplication | Exons 1–5 | Dutch | Early-onset PD | MLPA, sequencing | S | Macedo et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | Exon 2 | China | Early-onset PD | qPCR | S | Guo et al. ( |
| Homoz. deletion | Exon 5 | Iran | Typical clinical features | MLPA, qPCR | F | Darvish et al. ( |
The CNVs mutation type, the size of the mutation, the ethnicity of patients, the phenotype and the methodological approaches to measure quantitative genomic variations are reported. The column F–S reports if described cases are familial or sporadic
All the currently studies describing 22q11.2 deletions in PD patients
| CNVs involving the 22q11.2 region | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CNV type | Size | Ethnicity | Phenotype | Methodology | Familial vs. sporadic | References |
| Heteroz. deletion | n.a. | n.a. | Childhood-onset schizophrenia associated with parkinsonism | FISH | No family history | Krahn et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | 3 Mb including COMT gene | n.a. | 22qDS + early onset PD | FISH | No family history | Zaleski et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | n.a. | n.a. | 22qDS + PD (PD was considered a side effect of neuroleptic treatment or a clinical feature of early-onset PD) | FISH | n.a. | Booij et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | From 15 to 3 Mb | Canada | 22qDS + early-onset PD confirmed by neuropathological examination | FISH, quantitative real-time PCR | No family history | Butcher et al. ( |
| Mosaicism | n.a. | Ashkenazi Jewish | Midline defects and PD | FISH | Familial | Perandones et al. ( |
| Heteroz. deletion | 2.88 Mb | n.a. | 22q11.2DS + PD, dopa responsive | aCGH | Proband’s father developed PD in later life | Rehman et al. ( |
| Deletion | Eight patients, whose deletion ranged around 3 Mb | n.a. | Both early-onset and late-onset PD with typical motor signs and response to L-DOPA | Metanalysis of four previous independent studies and validation with CytoSure 15 K-Array | n.a. | Mok et al. ( |
The CNVs mutation type, the size of the mutation, the ethnicity of patients, the phenotype and the methodological approaches to measure quantitative genomic variations are reported. The column familial vs. sporadic reports if described cases are familial or sporadic PD
Fig. 5From a single-gene mutation perspective to a “systems biology” approach to dissect complex multifactorial diseases and improve the comprehension of the molecular basis underlying PD pathogenesis
Fig. 6Gene ontologies (GO) enrichment analysis of PD-specific CNV loci reveals biological processes relevant for PD pathogenesis. a Representation of the top ten most significantly enriched (FDR < 0.05) canonical GO biological processes associated with candidate PD genes with copy number alterations (not reported in controls or DGV). The analysis was performed using MetaCore platform (GeneGo, Thompson Reuters). The list is arranged in descending order with the most significant biological process at the top. Detailed information about the entire list of CNVs and overlapping genes are reported in Supplementary Table 1. p values have been obtained through hypergeometric analysis and corrected by FDR (false discovery rate) method. b Pie chart representing the percentage of genes with altered copy number in PD belonging to the top ten enriched (p < 0.05) GO Biological Processes
Fig. 7Potential protein–protein interactions among rare PD CNVs and the currently known Mendelian genes as shown by STRING Software v.10 (http://string-db.org/) with high confidence settings (0.700 as minimum interaction score). The legend displays the meaning of nodes and edges
Fig. 8Interaction map representing CNV-altered genes enriched in GO classes and grouped on the basis of their main biological processes. The map was created using the MetaCore Pathway Map Creator tool (GeneGo, Thompson Reuters). Detailed information about type of CNV, chromosomal size and study references are reported in Supplementary Table 1