@article{39c8d6ec793a4ed6acaeff33d8a1f44b,
title = "Rare variants in LRRK1 and Parkinson's disease",
abstract = "Approximately 20 % of individuals with Parkinson's disease (PD) report a positive family history. Yet, a large portion of causal and disease-modifying variants is still unknown. We used exome sequencing in two affected individuals from a family with late-onset PD to identify 15 potentially causal variants. Segregation analysis and frequency assessment in 862 PD cases and 1,014 ethnically matched controls highlighted variants in EEF1D and LRRK1 as the best candidates. Mutation screening of the coding regions of these genes in 862 cases and 1,014 controls revealed several novel non-synonymous variants in both genes in cases and controls. An in silico multi-model bioinformatics analysis was used to prioritize identified variants in LRRK1 for functional follow-up. However, protein expression, subcellular localization, and cell viability were not affected by the identified variants. Although it has yet to be proven conclusively that variants in LRRK1 are indeed causative of PD, our data strengthen a possible role for LRRK1 in addition to LRRK2 in the genetic underpinnings of PD but, at the same time, highlight the difficulties encountered in the study of rare variants identified by next-generation sequencing in diseases with autosomal dominant or complex patterns of inheritance.",
keywords = "EEF1D, Exome sequencing, LRRK1, Parkinson's disease",
author = "Schulte, {Eva C.} and Ellwanger, {Daniel C.} and Sybille Dihanich and Claudia Manzoni and Katrin Stangl and Barbara Schormair and Elisabeth Graf and Sebastian Eck and Brit Mollenhauer and Dietrich Haubenberger and Walter Pirker and Alexander Zimprich and Thomas Br{\"u}cke and Peter Lichtner and Annette Peters and Christian Gieger and Claudia Trenkwalder and Mewes, {Hans Werner} and Thomas Meitinger and Lewis, {Patrick A.} and Kl{\"u}nemann, {Hans H.} and Juliane Winkelmann",
note = "Funding Information: We are gratefully indebted to Katja Junghans, Susanne Lindhof, Jelena Golic, Sybille Frischholz, and Regina Feldmann at the Institut f{\"u}r Humangenetik, Helmholtz Zentrum M{\"u}nchen, Munich, Germany, for their expert technical assistance in performing Sequenom genotyping and Light Scanner analyses. This study was funded by in-house institutional funding from Technische Universit{\"a}t M{\"u}nchen and Helmholtz Zentrum M{\"u}nchen, Munich, Germany. Recruitment of case and control cohorts was supported by institutional (HelmholtzZentrumM{\"u}nchen, Munich, Germany) and government funding from the German Bundesministerium f{\"u}r Bildung und Forschung (03.2007-02.2011 FKZ 01ET0713). PAL is funded by a Parkinson's UK research fellowship (F1002). The work performed by PAL, SD, and CM was also funded in part by grants from the Michael J. Fox Foundation LRRK2 consortium and by the Wellcome Trust/MRC Joint Call in Neurodegeneration award (WT089698) to the UK Parkinson's Disease Consortium (UKPDC) whose members are from the UCL Institute of Neurology, the University of Sheffield, and the MRC Protein Phosphorylation Unit at the University of Dundee.",
year = "2014",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1007/s10048-013-0383-8",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "49--57",
journal = "Neurogenetics",
issn = "1364-6745",
publisher = "Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH",
number = "1",
}