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whitehead home > public programs > ask a scientist > archives > how might recent breakthroughs in our understanding of parkinson's affect the way we treat the disease?
 

Nov. 15, 2006 — Recently there have been some breakthroughs in our understanding of Parkinson's. How might these findings affect the way we treat the disease?

Response by Joshua Kritzer
Whitehead postdoctoral fellow

Much of what we know about Parkinson's disease comes from two lines of inquiry. The first is human genetics, studying how mutations in human genes cause familial, inherited forms of Parkinson's disease. Many exciting revelations have been made in this field in recent years, including the identification of several genes that, when they possess a specific mutation, appear to contribute to familial Parkinson's. Although most Parkinson's is not genetically inherited, but rather the "sporadic" form of the disease, knowing which genes can contribute to Parkinson's can help identify points in disease initiation or progression that drugs could target. In other words, discovering the genes behind familial Parkinson's points the way to critical proteins whose functions could be inhibited by drugs.

The second major line of inquiry into Parkinson's uses models of the disease in other living systems. This approach has also seen exciting developments lately. By investigating how models of Parkinson's progress in other living systems (including yeast, flies, worms, mice and human cells in culture dishes) we are getting a first glimpse into what goes wrong inside cells that are dying in Parkinson's. If the same things that cause yeast cells or worm neurons to go haywire in these models also are behind neuronal dysfunction in Parkinson's, then we can use these models to screen for drugs that ameliorate the disease.

Together, these two approaches are revealing what is actually going wrong on the cellular level in Parkinson's disease. With that information, we are well-primed for designing and testing new drugs and new therapies, which with any luck will progress (in a matter of years to decades) into clinical application.


Last updated November 15, 2006

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