
Movement disorders in young people related to ADHD
GENETIC KEY TO PARKINSON'S DISEASE
Researchers at the University of Copenhagen and the Copenhagen University Hospital have identified a particular genetic mutation that may cause parkinsonism in young people. The mutation interferes with the brain's transport of the important signal substance dopamine and may also plays a role in mental diseases, e.g. ADHD. The findings have just been published in the scientific Journal of Clinical Investigation.
Being one of the most important signal substances in the brain, dopamine is particularly important for the control of movements and reward mechanisms in the brain. In the new study, Danish researchers have focused on a special protein, the dopamine transporter (DAT). DAT is a transport protein, which controls the effect of dopamine by mediating re-uptake of released dopamine from the synaptic cleft to the nerve cell. This is a very fine balance – and even small fluctuations can have major consequences for brain function:

The researchers believe that DAT mutations may cause or predispose to the development of an entire spectrum of brain diseases – from relatively mild psychiatric diagnoses such as ADHD to serious movement disorders in infants such as Dopamine Transporter Deficiency Syndrome.
"We can now for the first time document that mutations in the DAT-encoding
gene can cause parkinsonism in young people. Furthermore, our studies
show that the gene mutation is likely to contribute to the development
of ADHD", explains
Ulrik Gether, Professor at the
Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology, University of Copenhagen.
The researchers believe that DAT mutations may cause or predispose to
the development of an entire spectrum of brain diseases – from relatively
mild psychiatric diagnoses such as ADHD to serious movement disorders
in infants such as Dopamine Transporter Deficiency Syndrome:
"Children born without a functional dopamine transporter develop
serious movement disorders from birth, which may result in premature death.
We have now identified mutations in the DAT-encoding gene as a novel cause
of parkinsonism in adult patients and possibly also to complex mental
disorders," says Freja H. Hansen, postdoc at the Department of Neuroscience
and Pharmacology.
Genetic analysis based on one man
The scientific article, which has just been published in Journal of Clinical Investigation, is based on one patient only. Neurologists and psychiatrists have examined the male patient, who is 45 years old and has suffered from serious movement disorders since he was in his 20s. Furthermore, he has had various mental problems since childhood. When he was 36 years old, he was diagnosed with ADHD:
"It was a great relief for the patient and his family to get a genetic explanation of a disease that has affected him since childhood," says Freja H. Hansen.
But can the results be used in a wider perspective?
"We will, among other things, create a mouse model with the same genetic
deficiencies, and we expect it to become a new disease model for parkinsonism
and mental disorders. We hope that this will help us find new and better
ways of treating these diseases," says Ulrik Gether.
"We would like to examine the frequency of mutations in the DAT-encoding
gene in both children and young adults with serious movement disorders.
This knowledge can clarify whether the DAT gene can be used in the genetic
investigation of patients. Genetic examinations of embryos may also be
relevant for some families," concludes Freja H. Hansen.
In this specific research project, the researchers at the University of
Copenhagen have worked closely with the geneticists Tina Skjørringe
and Lisbeth B. Møller from the Kennedy Centre at the Copenhagen
University Hospital as well as with neurologist Lena E. Hjermind from
the Department of Neurology also at the Copenhagen University Hospital.