info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Mosaicism of alpha-synuclein gene rearrangements: Report of two unrelated cases of early-onset parkinsonism
Fecha
2014-05Registro en:
Perandones, Claudia; Giugni, J. C.; Calvo, D. S.; Raina, G. B.; De Jorge Lopez, L.; et al.; Mosaicism of alpha-synuclein gene rearrangements: Report of two unrelated cases of early-onset parkinsonism; Elsevier; Parkinsonism & Related Disorders; 20; 5; 5-2014; 558-561
1353-8020
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Perandones, Claudia
Giugni, J. C.
Calvo, D. S.
Raina, G. B.
De Jorge Lopez, L.
Volpini, Victor
Zabetian, Cyrus P.
Mata, Ignacio F.
Caputo, Mariela
Corach, Daniel
Radrizzani Helguera, Martin
Micheli, Federico Eduardo
Resumen
In genetics, the term mosaicism describes the situation in which groups of cells have a different genetic composition to other cells in an organism. Somatic gene rearrangements due to multiplication or deletion of genes (copy number variation) and/or sections of chromosomes can lead to mosaicism. The presence of multiple copies of the alpha-synuclein gene (SNCA) is known to be associated with Parkinson´s disease (PD) and the severity of symptoms increases with the number of copies of the gene [1]. While the features of PD associated with duplication of SNCA are usually (but not always) typical of the condition [2] and [3], patients with triplicate copies have atypical features, including rapidly evolving symptoms, severe cognitive impairment, limited response to levodopa, more severe symptoms of dementia and more frequent urinary incontinence [2]. A lack of studies of mosaicism in PD illustrates that the prevalence and mechanism of these rearrangements have not yet been elucidated.