RESEARCH PAPER
Genetic and environmental risk factors of Parkinsonism.
AI Summary
This review synthesizes genetic and environmental risk factors for parkinsonian disorders, linking risk variants to pathogenic processes such as protein aggregation, trafficking, mitophagy, lysosomal/autophagy dysfunction, synaptic and dopaminergic disturbance, and noting pesticides and…
Why It Matters
By mapping genetic risk to actionable mechanisms (e.g., mitophagy, lysosomal dysfunction, alpha‑synuclein propagation) and calling out environmental toxins that can be modeled experimentally, the paper helps prioritize therapeutic targets and exposure‑based disease models for Parkinson's discovery…
Abstract
Parkinsonian disorders comprise a broad spectrum of neurodegenerative diseases with a wide variety of pathogenetic processes. These processes lead to the formation of pathological proteins, resulting in the brain diseases called synucleinopathies, tauopathies or TDP-43 proteinopathies. There is currently growing support for the hypothesis that genetic variants explain a significant fraction of the etiology of apparently sporadic parkinsonian disorders. Genetic risk factors can be stratified according to the metabolic or structural processes that can lead to cellular disturbance; these processes involve protein aggregation, protein and membrane trafficking, stabilization of the neurite structure, prion-like transmission of pathological proteins, ubiquitin-proteasome system balance, mitophagy, lysosome autophagy, synaptic functions, and dopamine transmission. Regarding the environmental risk factors, there are several substances that have been supposed of being a risk for the development of neurodegenerative proteinopathy and Parkinsonism, mainly the agents used in agriculture and the textile industry. The most important and most frequently studied are pesticides and trichlorethylene. Beside the globally ubiquitous substances which are supposedly neurotoxic and exposure to which can cause manifestations of Parkinsonism, there are more geographically (regionally) specific substances, which cause (or quite recently caused) the manifestation of endemically present Parkinsonism. Among ten types of endemic Parkinsonism, three of them are thought to have an environmental cause: Western Pacific Parkinsonism, Caribbean Parkinsonism, and North France cluster of atypical Parkinsonism.