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Heterozygous PINK1 p.G411S increases risk of Parkinson’s disease via a dominant-negative mechanism

Authors :
Y Sanotsky
Magdalena Boczarska-Jedynak
Ted M. Dawson
Matthew J. Farrer
Li Chen
Owen A. Ross
Fabienne C. Fiesel
Maya Ando
Thomas R. Caulfield
Roman Hudec
Monika Rudzińska-Bar
Joanna Siuda
Oskar Hansson
Kotaro Ogaki
Timothy Lynch
Grzegorz Opala
Andrzej Friedman
Peter A. Silburn
Valina L. Dawson
Dominika Truban
Elle D. James
Megha Mohan
Dariusz Koziorowski
Maria Swanberg
Michael G. Heckman
George D. Mellick
Itzia Jimenez-Ferrer
Carles Vilariño-Güell
Xu Hou
Wolfdieter Springer
Andreas Puschmann
Jan O. Aasly
Zbigniew K. Wszolek
Source :
Brain. 140:98-117
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2016.

Abstract

SEE GANDHI AND PLUN-FAVREAU DOI101093/AWW320 FOR A SCIENTIFIC COMMENTARY ON THIS ARTICLE: It has been postulated that heterozygous mutations in recessive Parkinson's genes may increase the risk of developing the disease. In particular, the PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1) p.G411S (c.1231G>A, rs45478900) mutation has been reported in families with dominant inheritance patterns of Parkinson's disease, suggesting that it might confer a sizeable disease risk when present on only one allele. We examined families with PINK1 p.G411S and conducted a genetic association study with 2560 patients with Parkinson's disease and 2145 control subjects. Heterozygous PINK1 p.G411S mutations markedly increased Parkinson's disease risk (odds ratio = 2.92, P = 0.032); significance remained when supplementing with results from previous studies on 4437 additional subjects (odds ratio = 2.89, P = 0.027). We analysed primary human skin fibroblasts and induced neurons from heterozygous PINK1 p.G411S carriers compared to PINK1 p.Q456X heterozygotes and PINK1 wild-type controls under endogenous conditions. While cells from PINK1 p.Q456X heterozygotes showed reduced levels of PINK1 protein and decreased initial kinase activity upon mitochondrial damage, stress-response was largely unaffected over time, as expected for a recessive loss-of-function mutation. By contrast, PINK1 p.G411S heterozygotes showed no decrease of PINK1 protein levels but a sustained, significant reduction in kinase activity. Molecular modelling and dynamics simulations as well as multiple functional assays revealed that the p.G411S mutation interferes with ubiquitin phosphorylation by wild-type PINK1 in a heterodimeric complex. This impairs the protective functions of the PINK1/parkin-mediated mitochondrial quality control. Based on genetic and clinical evaluation as well as functional and structural characterization, we established p.G411S as a rare genetic risk factor with a relatively large effect size conferred by a partial dominant-negative function phenotype.

Details

ISSN :
14602156 and 00068950
Volume :
140
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6f3b7c1ce080a6f6bc91fa03ea30bc34