Genetic Research Offers Hope For Parkinson’s Disease
There’s new hope for treating Parkinson’s disease with the publication of groundbreaking genetic research from the University of Auckland.
There’s new hope for treating
Parkinson’s disease with the publication of groundbreaking
genetic research from the University of Auckland.
The
study is authored by a research team, led by Professor
Justin O’Sullivan from the University’s Liggins
Institute and Professor Antony Cooper of the Garvan
Institute of Medical Research.
In a paper just published
online in the journal Brain,
the research team took 90 known genetic changes that are
each individually associated with the risk of developing
Parkinson’s disease and showed how they affect biological
pathways in the body’s tissues, many far from the brain.
Nine of these pathways, some of which have not been linked
to Parkinson’s before, seem to be key.
“Our ultimate
aim is to slow or stop Parkinson’s,” says Justin. “If
we can understand how the genetic changes work together to
contribute to the risk of developing the disease, we’ve
got a shot at doing that.
“Parkinson’s isn’t just
one disease – it’s a disease that has many different
sub-types, depending on the different sets of genetic
changes, says Justin.
“Eventually, personalised
medicine will allow for people to be treated for the exact
form of Parkinson’s that they have – or are at risk of
developing. We’re working for that day to come as quickly
as it can,” he says.
The findings improve scientists’
understanding of genetic risk factors for developing
Parkinson’s disease.
“Our intent is to identify which
of the 90 genetic changes interact in specific combinations
that disable a biological pathway, and thereby contribute to
an individual developing a disease subtype - and this paper
is a critical first step (towards that goal),” says
Antony.
Sophie Farrow conducted the study as part of her
PhD. In a follow up study, funded by The Michael J. Fox
Foundation for Parkinson’s Research, Sophie is now moving
from computers to lab work on human cells to test the
team’s theory and prove the genetic variations have the
effect they have identified.
In August 2020, the leading
journal on Parkinson’s, Movement
Disorders, featured the team’s findings as a cover
story, after they showed that genetic changes in a gene
called GBA play a significant role in regulating the age of
onset of the disease.
One of the team’s latest pieces
of research (published in Frontiers
in Genetics in 2022) suggests that changes within a part
of the heart called an atrial appendage could contribute to
people developing Parkinson’s.
“Parkinson’s was
once seen solely as a disease of the brain, but now we know
it’s much, much more than that,” says Justin.
Despite
the number of people it affects, Parkinson’s remains a
medical mystery. Doctors do not know why most people develop
the disease and there is no cure.
More than 10 million
people are living with Parkinson’s worldwide, and about
1-in-100 people over the age of 60 in New Zealand have the
condition, with symptoms including tremor, rigidity,
fatigue, bladder and bowel problems, depression, and
sweating.
This work was supported by grants from The
Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research and the
Silverstein Foundation for Parkinson’s with GBA, and The
Dines Family Foundation.
Sophie L. Farrow, William
Schierding, Sreemol Gokuladhas, Evgeniia Golovina, Tayaza
Fadason, Antony A. Cooper, Justin M. O’Sullivan,
Establishing gene regulatory networks from Parkinson’s
disease risk loci, Brain, 2022;, awac022, https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awac022