Abstract

To date the LRRK2 p.G2019S mutation remains the most common genetic cause of Parkinson disease (PD) worldwide. It accounts for up to 6% of familial and approximately 1.5% of sporadic cases. LRRK2 has a kinase enzymatic domain which provides an attractive potential target for drug therapies and LRRK2 kinase inhibitors are in development. Prevalence of the p.G2019S has a variable ethnic and geographic distribution, the highest reported among Ashkenazi Jews (30% in patients with familial PD, 14% in sporadic PD, 2.0% in controls) and North African Berbers (37% in patients with familial PD, 41% in sporadic PD, and 1% in controls). Little is known about the frequency of the LRRK2 p.G2019S among populations in sub-Saharan Africa. Our group and others previously reported that the p.G2019S is absent in a small cohort of Nigerian PD patients and controls. Here we used Kompetitive Allele Specific PCR (KASP) assay to screen for the p.G2019S in a larger cohort of Black African PD patients (n = 126) and healthy controls (n = 54) from Nigeria. Our analysis confirmed that all patients and controls are negative for the p.G2019S mutation. This report provides further evidence that the LRRK2 p.G2019S is not implicated in PD in black populations from Nigeria and support the notion that p.G2019S mutation originated after the early human dispersal from sub-Saharan Africa. Further studies using larger cohorts and advance sequencing technology are required to underpin the genetic causes of PD in this region.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMutations in the leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) gene, initially described in 2004, are the most prevalent genetic cause of Parkinson disease (PD), and have been associated with both familial and sporadic cases of PD in some populations.[1,2] at least seven distinct

  • The leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) p.G2019S mutation was absent in all subjects

  • All 126 Parkinson disease (PD) patients and 54 controls were homozygous for the p.G2019S (GG) normal allele (Fig 1B and 1C)

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Summary

Introduction

Mutations in the leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) gene, initially described in 2004, are the most prevalent genetic cause of Parkinson disease (PD), and have been associated with both familial and sporadic cases of PD in some populations.[1,2] at least seven distinct. LRRK2 GLY2019SER mutation absent in Nigerians with Parkinson disease

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