利用基因多样性了解非洲单基因帕金森病的情况。

American journal of neurodegenerative disease Pub Date : 2023-08-15 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01
Wael Mohamed
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摘要

在5-10%的病例(单基因)中,帕金森病可能由单一的高度有害和渗透致病性变体引起。对这些突变性疾病的研究产生了重要的病理生理学见解。本文研究了疾病的表型、基因型、病理生理学以及遗传形式的地理和种族分布。公认的帕金森病(PD)因果变异可以遵循常染色体显性遗传(SNCA、LRRK2和VPS35)和常染色体隐性遗传模式(PRKN、PINK1和DJ)。帕金森氏症是一种全球性疾病,但非洲人群在这方面的研究不足。目前尚未进行流行率或发病率调查。很少有关于非洲阿比亚社区帕金森病遗传风险因素的研究报告支持这样一种观点,即非洲阿比亚的帕金森病患病率和发病率通常低于欧洲和北美人群。在AfraAbia,只有少数有文献记载的帕金森病遗传研究,对帕金森病的队列和病例对照研究也非常有限。在这篇文章中,我们总结了先前在非洲进行的单基因PD研究,并强调了数据差距和有希望的新研究方向。我们强调,单基因帕金森病受到种族和地理差异的影响,从而加强了全球倡议的必要性,以聚集大量患者并确定新的候选基因。当前的文章增加了我们对帕金森病(PD)遗传学的了解,并有助于进一步了解导致PD的遗传因素,如已知遗传变异的外显率较低和临床表现力不同,特别是在非洲帕金森病患者中。
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Leveraging genetic diversity to understand monogenic Parkinson's disease's landscape in AfrAbia.

Parkinson's disease may be caused by a single highly deleterious and penetrant pathogenic variant in 5-10% of cases (monogenic). Research into these mutational disorders yields important pathophysiological insights. This article examines the phenotype, genotype, pathophysiology, and geographic and ethnic distribution of genetic forms of disease. Well established Parkinson's disease (PD) causal variants can follow an autosomal dominant (SNCA, LRRK2, and VPS35) and autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance (PRKN, PINK1, and DJ). Parkinson's disease is a worldwide condition, yet the AfrAbia population is understudied in this regard. No prevalence or incidence investigations have been conducted yet. Few studies on genetic risk factors for PD in AfrAbia communities have been reported which supported the notion that the prevalence and incidence rates of PD in AfrAbia are generally lower than those reported for European and North American populations. There have been only a handful of documented genetic studies of PD in AfrAbia and very limited cohort and case-control research studies on PD have been documented. In this article, we provide a summary of prior conducted research on monogenic PD in Africa and highlight data gaps and promising new research directions. We emphasize that monogenic Parkinson's disease is influenced by distinctions in ethnicity and geography, thereby reinforcing the need for global initiatives to aggregate large numbers of patients and identify novel candidate genes. The current article increases our knowledge of the genetics of Parkinson's disease (PD) and helps to further our knowledge on the genetic factors that contribute to PD, such as the lower penetrance and varying clinical expressivity of known genetic variants, particularly in AfrAbian PD patients.

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