4.8 Article

Pleiotropic effects for Parkin and LRRK2 in leprosy type-1 reactions and Parkinson's disease

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1901805116

Keywords

leprosy type-1 reaction; inflammation; Parkinson's disease; Parkin; LRRK2

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [FDN-143332, FDN-154301]
  2. Canada Research Chair [229792]
  3. CIHR [154301]
  4. Van Berkom-Saucier Foundation
  5. Graduate Student Award from Healthy Brains for Healthy Lives
  6. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Interagency Agreement [IAA 15006-004]
  7. Parkinson Canada

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Type-1 reactions (T1R) are pathological inflammatory episodes and main contributors to nerve damage in leprosy. Here, we evaluate the genewise enrichment of rare protein-altering variants in 7 genes where common variants were previously associated with T1R. We selected 474 Vietnamese leprosy patients of which 237 were T1R-affected and 237 were T1R-free matched controls. Genewise enrichment of nonsynonymous variants was tested with both kernel-based (sequence kernel association test [SKAT]) and burden methods. Of the 7 genes tested 2 showed statistical evidence of association with T1R. For the LRRK2 gene an enrichment of nonsynonymous variants was observed in T1R-free controls (PSKAT-O = 1.6 x 10(-4)). This genewise association was driven almost entirely by the gain-of-function variant R1628P (P = 0.004; odds ratio = 0.29). The second genewise association was found for the Parkin coding gene PRKN (formerly PARK2) where 7 rare variants were enriched in T1R-affected cases (PSKAT-O = 7.4 x 10(-5)). Mutations in both PRKN and LRRK2 are known causes of Parkinson's disease (PD). Hence, we evaluated to what extent such rare amino acid changes observed in T1R are shared with PD. We observed that amino acids in Parkin targeted by nonsynonymous T1R-risk mutations were also enriched for mutations implicated in PD (P = 1.5 x 10(-4)). Hence, neuroinflammation in PD and peripheral nerve damage due to inflammation in T1R share overlapping genetic control of pathogenicity.

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