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dc.creatorPlaitakis, A.en
dc.creatorLatsoudis, H.en
dc.creatorKanavouras, K.en
dc.creatorRitz, B.en
dc.creatorBronstein, J. M.en
dc.creatorSkoula, I.en
dc.creatorMastorodemos, V.en
dc.creatorPapapetropoulos, S.en
dc.creatorBorompokas, N.en
dc.creatorZaganas, I.en
dc.creatorXiromerisiou, G.en
dc.creatorHadjigeorgiou, G. M.en
dc.creatorSpanaki, C.en
dc.date.accessioned2015-11-23T10:45:44Z
dc.date.available2015-11-23T10:45:44Z
dc.date.issued2010
dc.identifier10.1038/ejhg.2009.179
dc.identifier.issn1018-4813
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11615/32320
dc.description.abstractParkinson's disease (PD), a common neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive loss of dopaminergic neurons and their terminations in the basal ganglia, is thought to be related to genetic and environmental factors. Although the pathophysiology of PD neurodegeneration remains unclear, protein misfolding, mitochondrial abnormalities, glutamate dysfunction and/or oxidative stress have been implicated. In this study, we report that a rare T1492G variant in GLUD2, an X-linked gene encoding a glutamate dehydrogenase (a mitochondrial enzyme central to glutamate metabolism) that is expressed in brain (hGDH2), interacted significantly with age at PD onset in Caucasian populations. Individuals hemizygous for this GLUD2 coding change that results in substitution of Ala for Ser445 in the regulatory domain of hGDH2 developed PD 6-13 years earlier than did subjects with other genotypes in two independent Greek PD groups and one North American PD cohort. However, this effect was not present in female PD patients who were heterozygous for the DNA change. The variant enzyme, obtained by substitution of Ala for Ser445, showed an enhanced basal activity that was resistant to GTP inhibition but markedly sensitive to modification by estrogens. Thus, a gain-of-function rare polymorphism in hGDH2 hastens the onset of PD in hemizygous subjects, probably by damaging nigral cells through enhanced glutamate oxidative dehydrogenation. The lack of effect in female heterozygous PD patients could be related to a modification of the overactive variant enzyme by estrogens. European Journal of Human Genetics (2010) 18, 336-341; doi:10.1038/ejhg.2009.179; published online 14 October 2009en
dc.sourceEuropean Journal of Human Geneticsen
dc.source.uri<Go to ISI>://WOS:000274601800012
dc.subjectParkinson's disease onseten
dc.subjectglutamate dehydrogenaseen
dc.subjectgain-of-functionen
dc.subjectestrogensen
dc.subjectTISSUE-SPECIFIC GLUD2en
dc.subjectCLINICAL CHARACTERISTICSen
dc.subjectOXIDATIVE STRESSen
dc.subjectMETABOLISMen
dc.subjectGENEen
dc.subjectMITOCHONDRIAen
dc.subjectSUBSTITUTIONen
dc.subjectMECHANISMSen
dc.subjectABOLISHESen
dc.subjectMUTATIONSen
dc.subjectBiochemistry & Molecular Biologyen
dc.subjectGenetics & Heredityen
dc.titleGain-of-function variant in GLUD2 glutamate dehydrogenase modifies Parkinson's disease onseten
dc.typejournalArticleen


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