Aldehyde dehydrogenase variation enhances effect of pesticides associated with Parkinson disease.

Neurology

From the Department of Neurology (A.G.F., B.R., J.M.B.), David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles; Department of Molecular Toxicology (A.G.F., B.R., J.M.B.), University of California, Los Angeles; Departments of Epidemiology (S.L.R., B.R.) and Environmental Health Sciences (B.R.), UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, Los Angeles; Department of Preventive Medicine (M.C.), Keck School of Medicine of USC, Los Angeles; and Parkinson's Disease Research, Education, and Clinical Center (J.M.B.), Greater Los Angeles Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA.

Published: February 2014

Objective: The objective of this study was to determine whether environmental and genetic alterations of neuronal aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) enzymes were associated with increased Parkinson disease (PD) risk in an epidemiologic study.

Methods: A novel ex vivo assay was developed to identify pesticides that can inhibit neuronal ALDH activity. These were investigated for PD associations in a population-based case-control study, the Parkinson's Environment & Genes (PEG) Study. Common variants in the mitochondrial ALDH2 gene were genotyped to assess effect measure modification (statistical interaction) of the pesticide effects by genetic variation.

Results: All of the metal-coordinating dithiocarbamates tested (e.g., maneb, ziram), 2 imidazoles (benomyl, triflumizole), 2 dicarboxymides (captan, folpet), and 1 organochlorine (dieldrin) inhibited ALDH activity, potentially via metabolic byproducts (e.g., carbon disulfide, thiophosgene). Fifteen screened pesticides did not inhibit ALDH. Exposures to ALDH-inhibiting pesticides were associated with 2- to 6-fold increases in PD risk; genetic variation in ALDH2 exacerbated PD risk in subjects exposed to ALDH-inhibiting pesticides.

Conclusion: ALDH inhibition appears to be an important mechanism through which environmental toxicants contribute to PD pathogenesis, especially in genetically vulnerable individuals, suggesting several potential interventions to reduce PD occurrence or slow or reverse its progression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3917685PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000000083DOI Listing

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