4.7 Article

PTPA variants and impaired PP2A activity in early-onset parkinsonism with intellectual disability

Journal

BRAIN
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awac326

Keywords

PTPA; PPP2R4; parkinsonism; intellectual disability; PP2A

Funding

  1. Stichting ParkinsonFonds (The Netherlands) [SPF-1870]
  2. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale (FRM) [MND202004011718]
  3. PTC Therapeutics
  4. Fondation de France
  5. France-Parkinson Association
  6. Federation pour la Recherche sur le Cerveau (FRC)
  7. French program `Investissements d'avenir' [ANR-10-IAIHU-06]
  8. South African Medical Research Council (Self-Initiated Research Grant)
  9. National Research Foundation of South Africa [129249]

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This study identified variants in the PTPA gene associated with early-onset parkinsonism and intellectual disability. These variants lead to impaired activation of the PP2A complex, resulting in neurodegeneration. The Drosophila model further confirmed this mechanism.
The protein phosphatase 2A complex (PP2A), the major Ser/Thr phosphatase in the brain, is involved in a number of signalling pathways and functions, including the regulation of crucial proteins for neurodegeneration, such as alphasynuclein, tau and LRRK2. Here, we report the identification of variants in the PTPA/PPP2R4 gene, encoding a major PP2A activator, in two families with early-onset parkinsonism and intellectual disability. We carried out clinical studies and genetic analyses, including genome-wide linkage analysis, whole-exome sequencing, and Sanger sequencing of candidate variants. We next performed functional studies on the disease-associated variants in cultured cells and knock-down of ptpa in Drosophila melanogaster. We first identified a homozygous PTPA variant, c.893T>G (p.Met298Arg), in patients from a South African family with early-onset parkinsonism and intellectual disability. Screening of a large series of additional families yielded a second homozygous variant, c.512C>A(p.Ala171Asp), in a Libyan family with a similar phenotype. Both variants co-segregate with disease in the respective families. The affected subjects display juvenile-onset parkinsonism and intellectual disability. The motor symptoms were responsive to treatment with levodopa and deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus. In overexpression studies, both the PTPA p.Ala171Asp and p.Met298Arg variants were associated with decreased PTPA RNA stability and decreased PTPA protein levels; the p.Ala171Asp variant additionally displayed decreased PTPA protein stability. Crucially, expression of both variants was associated with decreased PP2A complex levels and impaired PP2A phosphatase activation. PTPA orthologue knock-down in Drosophila neurons induced a significant impairment of locomotion in the climbing test. This defect was age-dependent and fully reversed by L-DOPA treatment. We conclude that bi-allelic missense PTPA variants associated with impaired activation of the PP2A phosphatase cause autosomal recessive early-onset parkinsonism with intellectual disability. Our findings might also provide new insights for understanding the role of the PP2A complex in the pathogenesis of more common forms of neurodegeneration.

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