Alpha-Synuclein Propagation Mechanism
Overview
Alpha-synuclein propagation is a fundamental mechanism in [Parkinson's disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease) (PD) and related synucleinopathies, describing the progressive spread of misfolded alpha-synuclein protein throughout the nervous system[@brundin2017][@jucker2018]. This [prion-like spreading](/entities/prion-like-spreading) hypothesis explains the stereotypical progression of Lewy body pathology and provides a framework for understanding disease progression and potential therapeutic interventions.
The propagation of alpha-synuclein pathology represents one of the most critical concepts in modern neurodegenerative disease research, bridging the gap between genetic susceptibility, protein misfolding, and the characteristic spread of pathology through the nervous system. Understanding the mechanisms of propagation has direct implications for disease staging, biomarker development, and therapeutic intervention.
Propagation Pathway Diagram
The following diagram illustrates the complete alpha-synuclein propagation cascade from molecular triggers through cell-to-cell transmission to disease outcomes:
Mermaid diagram (expand to render)
Molecular Basis of Propagation
Alpha-synuclein is a natively unfolded protein of 140 amino acids encoded by the SNCA gene[@singleton2003]. Under pathological conditions, the protein undergoes a conformational transition from its native random coil structure to beta-sheet-rich oligomers and fibrils[@cremades2012]. These misfolded species:
- Form insoluble Lewy bodies and Lewy neurites
- Exhibit prion-like properties enabling cell-to-cell transmission
- Accumulate in vulnerable neuronal populations in a staging-dependent manner
The misfolding process involves several intermediate species that differ in their toxicity and propagation potential[@volpicellidaley2016]:
- Native monomer: The physiological, intrinsically disordered form
- Oligomers: Early-stage aggregates (dimers, trimers, small oligomers) - highly toxic
- Protofibrils: Intermediate filamentous structures
- Fibrils: Mature insoluble filaments that compose Lewy bodies
The propagation involves several key steps[@brundin2017a]:
Seed formation: Pathological alpha-synuclein serves as a conformational template
Release: Misfolded protein is released via exocytosis or membrane rupture
Uptake: Recipient cells internalize the seeds via endocytosis
Templation: Endogenous alpha-synuclein is recruited into the misfolded conformation
Replication: The cycle repeats, amplifying the pathological speciesThe efficiency of templation depends on the stability of the template and the concentration of endogenous substrate. Mutations in SNCA that increase aggregation propensity (A53T, A30P, E46K) accelerate propagation[@miller2023].
Strain Diversity and Propagation
A critical concept in alpha-synuclein propagation is the existence of distinct "strains" - conformational variants that exhibit different biological properties[@guo2023]. These strains:
- Display distinct fibril morphologies under electron microscopy
- Show varying propagation efficiencies in different cell types
- Produce different clinical phenotypes when inoculated into animal models
- May explain the heterogeneity of synucleinopathies (PD, DLB, MSA)
Strain diversity has important implications for biomarker development and therapeutic targeting, as a therapy effective against one strain may not protect against others.
Braak Staging and Propagation Patterns
The progression of alpha-synuclein pathology follows the Braak staging scheme[@braak2003]:
| Stage | Affected Regions | Clinical Correlation |
|-------|-----------------|----------------------|
| 1-2 | Olfactory bulb, dorsal motor nucleus of vagus, enteric nervous system | Incidental Lewy bodies, anosmia, REM sleep behavior disorder |
| 3-4 | Substantia nigra pars compacta, basal forebrain, amygdala | Motor symptoms (parkinsonism), PD diagnosis, mood changes |
| 5-6 | Neocortex (especially frontal and temporal), hippocampal formation | Dementia, cognitive decline, psychosis |
Limitations of Braak Staging
While influential, the Braak staging model has notable limitations:
- Not all PD cases follow the predicted pattern
- Limbic and cortical predominant variants exist
- The model does not fully account for co-pathology (tau, amyloid)
- Some studies suggest independent cortical origins
Alternative Staging Systems
More recent staging systems include:
- UNified Staging System for Lewy Bodies: Integrates cortical involvement with motor and non-motor symptoms
- DLB Consensus Criteria: Distinguishes limbic vs. neocortical predominant patterns
- Movement Disorder Society Criteria: Incorporates prodromal stages
Cell-to-Cell Transmission Mechanisms
Secretory Pathways
Multiple pathways facilitate alpha-synuclein release[@lee2014]:
- Exocytosis: Activity-dependent release via synaptic vesicles
- [Exosomes](/entities/exosomes): Extracellular vesicles containing pathological species
- Direct membrane translocation: Pore-like formation
- Lysosomal exocytosis: Release following lysosomal permeabilization
The relative contribution of each pathway varies with:
- Neuronal activity levels
- Cellular stress conditions
- Mutation status of SNCA
- Cell type (neurons vs. glia)
Exosomes play a particularly important role in propagation[@stuendl2016]:
- Contain hyperphosphorylated alpha-synuclein
- Mediate long-distance transport across the brain
- Can transfer pathology between cell types
- Are detectable in cerebrospinal fluid and blood
Cellular Uptake
[Neurons](/entities/neurons) and glia take up extracellular alpha-synuclein through[@mao2016]:
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis: LRP1, LRP2 (megalin), MHC-I, TLR2
- Clathrin-dependent pathways: Bulk endocytic uptake
- Direct membrane penetration: Pore formation by oligomeric species
- Synaptic vesicle-mediated uptake: Endocytosis at synapses
The uptake efficiency is modulated by:
- Expression of cell surface receptors
- Membrane lipid composition
- Conformational state of the alpha-synuclein species
- Cellular energy status
Retrograde Transport and Propagation
Once internalized, alpha-synuclein seeds undergo:
Retrograde transport along microtubules
Targeting to the soma via dynein-mediated transport
Templation of endogenous alpha-synuclein in the cytosol
Anterograde transport to synaptic terminalsThis creates a vicious cycle where each affected neuron becomes a source of new seeds.
Factors Influencing Propagation
Genetic Modifiers
Several genes affect propagation efficiency[@recasens2014]:
- SNCA duplication/mutation: Faster propagation (multiplication, A53T, A30P)
- [LRRK2](/entities/lrrk2) mutations: Altered exosome release, G2019S increases propagation
- [GBA](/entities/gba) mutations: Enhanced neuronal vulnerability, impaired autophagy
- MAPT (tau): Co-pathology accelerates spread
- APOE ε4: Risk factor for rapid progression
Cellular Environment
The propagation is modulated by[@choi2020]:
- Neuroinflammation and microglial activation: Creates permissive environment
- Neuronal activity levels: Higher activity increases release
- [Blood-brain barrier](/entities/blood-brain-barrier) integrity: Breakdown facilitates peripheral entry
- Age-related changes in protein homeostasis: Declining clearance systems
- Cellular energy status: Mitochondrial dysfunction enhances vulnerability
Environmental Factors
Epidemiological studies suggest several environmental modifiers:
- Head trauma: May accelerate propagation via mechanical injury
- Rural living/pesticide exposure: Associated with faster progression
- Smoking: Complex relationship - may paradoxically reduce risk
- Physical activity: May slow progression via enhanced clearance
Gut-Brain Propagation: The Enteric Nervous System
The Vagal Pathway
One of the most important propagation routes is through the vagus nerve[@braak2003a]:
Alpha-synuclein pathology begins in the enteric nervous system (ENS)
Pathological species are taken up by preganglionic vagal neurons
Retrograde transport occurs to the dorsal motor nucleus
Further retrograde transport reaches the substantia nigraThis provides a mechanistic basis for:
- The early presence of constipation in PD
- The association of vagotomy with reduced PD risk
- The Braak staging pattern starting from the gut
Evidence from Animal Models
Studies in rodents and non-human primates have demonstrated:
- Inoculation into the intestinal wall leads to CNS propagation
- Vagotomy prevents or delays CNS involvement
- The timeline (months to years) matches human disease progression
- Different strains show different propagation kinetics
Brain-First vs. Body-First Propagation
An emerging model distinguishes two pathways[@borghammer2022]:
Body-First (70% of cases):
- Origin in ENS or peripheral nervous system
- Follows vagal pathway to brainstem
- Associated with REM sleep behavior disorder
- More rapid progression to dementia
Brain-First (30% of cases):
- Origin in CNS (often olfactory bulb or dorsal motor nucleus)
- May begin independently of peripheral pathology
- Less associated with REM sleep behavior disorder
- Slower progression to dementia
Clinical Implications and Biomarkers
Seed Amplification Assays
The detection of pathological alpha-synuclein has been revolutionized by seed amplification assays[@ponnusamy2023]:
| Assay | Detection Medium | Sensitivity | Specificity |
|-------|-----------------|-------------|-------------|
| RT-QuIC | CSF, tissue | 90-95% | 95-100% |
| PMCA | CSF, blood | 85-95% | 90-98% |
| sIBM | Skin, ENS | 80-90% | 90-95% |
These assays detect:
- Pathological alpha-synuclein (oligomers, fibrils)
- Are positive in prodromal RBD years before diagnosis
- Show high specificity for synucleinopathies
PET Imaging
Alpha-synuclein PET ligands remain an important research goal[@kantarci2024]:
- First-generation ligands show promise in animal models
- Challenges include distinguishing Lewy bodies from tau/amyloid
- Human trials are ongoing
- Would enable in vivo disease staging
CSF and Blood Biomarkers
| Biomarker | Change | Diagnostic Utility |
|-----------|--------|-------------------|
| Total α-synuclein | Decreased | Moderate |
| Phospho-Ser129 α-syn | Increased | High |
| Oligomeric α-syn | Increased | Moderate |
| Exosomal α-syn | Increased | Moderate |
Therapeutic Implications
Targeting Propagation
Strategies to halt alpha-synuclein spreading include[@brundin2017b]:
Anti-aggregation compounds:
- Small molecules preventing fibril formation (e.g., Anle138b)
- Peptide inhibitors targeting the templation interface
- Compounds stabilizing the native state
Antibody therapies:
- Passive immunization against pathological species
- Active vaccination approaches
- Antibody delivery across the BBB
Gene therapy:
- Silencing SNCA expression (ASO, RNAi)
- Increasing autophagy and clearance
- Expressing protective variants
Protein homeostasis enhancement:
- Boosting [autophagy](/entities/autophagy) function
- Enhancing proteasome activity
- Modulating molecular chaperones
Clinical Trials Targeting Propagation
Current trials include:
- PRY004 (Roche): Anti-alpha-synuclein antibody - Phase 2
- Cinpanemab (Biogen): Anti-alpha-synuclein antibody - Phase 2
- APO-αSyn (AbbVie): Gene therapy approach
- ASO therapies: Multiple programs in development
Animal Models of Propagation
Rodent Models
Common models include[@volpicellidaley2022]:
- Preformed fibril (PFF) injection: Induces Lewy-like pathology
- Viral vector overexpression: SNCA transgenes
- Transgenic models: Bacterial artificial chromosomes
- Knock-in models: Human SNCA with mutations
Non-Human Primate Models
Primate models provide:
- Longer lifespan enabling chronic studies
- Brain architecture similar to humans
- Demonstration of propagation across multiple brain regions
- Relevance to therapeutic testing
Assembloids and Organoids
Human model systems include:
- Midbrain organoids: 3D cultures containing neurons and glia
- Striatal-midbrain assembloids: Demonstrated propagation
- Patient-derived iPSC models: Patient-specific pathology
- Microfluidic devices: Controlled propagation studies
Cross-Linking
Alpha-synuclein propagation intersects with multiple neurodegenerative mechanisms:
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease) - Primary disease context
- [Alpha-Synuclein](/proteins/alpha-synuclein) - The propagating protein
- [SNCA](/genes/snca) - Encoding gene
- [Lewy Bodies](/mechanisms/lewy-bodies) - Pathological inclusion
- [Substantia Nigra Degeneration](/mechanisms/substantia-nigra-degeneration-pd) - Vulnerable neuron population
- [Synucleinopathies](/mechanisms/synucleinopathies) - Disease category
- [Exosomes](/entities/exosomes) - Propagation vehicles
- [Autophagy](/entities/autophagy) - Clearance pathway
See Also
- [Parkinson's Disease](/diseases/parkinsons-disease)
- [Alpha-Synuclein](/proteins/alpha-synuclein)
- [SNCA](/genes/snca)
- [Lewy Bodies](/mechanisms/lewy-bodies)
- [Substantia Nigra Degeneration](/mechanisms/substantia-nigra-degeneration-pd)
- [Synucleinopathies](/mechanisms/synucleinopathies)
External Links
- [PubMed](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/)
- [KEGG Pathways](https://www.genome.jp/kegg/pathway.html)
Recent Research Updates (2024-2026)
This section highlights recent publications relevant to this mechanism.
- [Pathological Protein Targets in Parkinson's Disease: Progress Towards the Development of Disease-Modifying Therapies.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41703390/) (2026 Apr) - CNS drugs
- [Low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1 mediates α-synuclein transmission from the striatum to the substantia nigra in animal models of Parkinson's disease.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39104172/) (2026 Apr 1) - Neural regeneration research
- [Targeting TREM2 to disentangle neuroinflammation and α-Syn pathological propagation in Parkinson's disease.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41833769/) (2026 Mar 13) - Cellular signalling
- [Gut-initiated alpha synuclein fibrils drive parkinsonism phenotypes: temporal mapping of REM sleep behavior disorder-like and other non-motor symptoms.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41808195/) (2026 Mar 10) - Translational neurodegeneration
- [A human striatal-midbrain assembloid model of alpha-synuclein propagation.](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40919647/) (2026 Mar 5) - Brain : a journal of neurology
Propagation in Specific Brain Regions
Substantia Nigra
The substantia nigra pars compacta is uniquely vulnerable to alpha-synuclein pathology due to several factors:
- High metabolic demand: Dopaminergic neurons have high energy requirements
- Low calcium buffering: Susceptibility to calcium dysregulation
- High iron content: Fenton chemistry promotes oxidative stress
- Pacemaker activity: Continuous firing increases protein turnover
- Mitochondrial dysfunction: Complex I defects are well-documented
The loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra is the pathological hallmark of PD and correlates with motor symptoms. Propagation to this region from earlier-affected areas is a critical step in disease progression.
Limbic System and Amygdala
The limbic system, particularly the amygdala, is affected early in synucleinopathies:
- Emotional processing deficits: Anhedonia, anxiety, depression
- Memory consolidation: Hippocampal involvement
- Olfactory amygdala: Early involvement in Braak stages 3-4
- Mamillary bodies: Wernicke's encephalopathy-like changes
Cortex
Cortical involvement marks the transition to diffuse Lewy body disease:
- Prefrontal cortex: Executive dysfunction
- Temporal cortex: Language and memory deficits
- Occipital cortex: Visual hallucinations (DLB)
- Primary motor cortex: Late-stage motor involvement
The pattern of cortical involvement determines the clinical phenotype between PD dementia and Dementia with Lewy Bodies.
Experimental Approaches to Study Propagation
In Vitro Models
Cell culture systems have elucidated propagation mechanisms:
Primary neuron cultures: Primary cortical or midbrain neurons
Immortalized cell lines: SH-SY5Y, MES23.5, HeLa
iPSC-derived neurons: Patient-specific models
Co-culture systems: Neurons with astrocytes or microgliaIn Vivo Models
Animal models demonstrate propagation in complex systems:
| Model Type | Advantages | Limitations |
|-----------|------------|-------------|
| PFF injection | Rapid pathology induction | Artificial seeding |
| Viral vector | Long-term expression | Variable spread |
| Transgenic | Physiological expression | Variable penetrance |
| Knock-in | Physiological levels | Slow pathology |
Human Tissue Studies
Post-mortem studies remain essential:
- Brain bank comparisons (PD, DLB, MSA, controls)
- Staging-based sampling across brain regions
- Correlation of pathology with clinical data
- Development of new staging systems
Mathematical Models of Propagation
Quantitative approaches have advanced understanding:
Epidemiological Models
- Age-of-onset modeling
- Progression rate estimation
- Stage-transition probabilities
Biophysical Models
- Nucleation kinetics
- Templation efficiency
- Transport rates
Network Models
- Brain connectome-based spread
- Vulnerability mapping
- Region-to-region transmission
These models have clinical applications for:
- Predicting disease progression
- Identifying optimal intervention points
- Designing clinical trials
Future Directions
Unresolved Questions
Critical knowledge gaps remain:
Initiating events: What triggers the first misfolding?
Strain identification: How do strains determine phenotypes?
Clearance mechanisms: Why does clearance fail?
Therapeutic windows: When is intervention most effective?
Biomarker validation: Which markers predict progression?Emerging Technologies
New approaches promise advances:
- Cryo-EM structures: Atomic resolution of fibril forms
- Single-cell proteomics: Cell-type specific pathology
- Optogenetics: Controlling propagation in real-time
- Gene editing: Correcting mutations in vivo
Personalized Medicine
Future directions include:
- Strain-specific therapies
- Genetic risk-stratified prevention
- Biomarker-guided intervention timing
- Combination therapies targeting multiple pathways
References
[Brundin et al., Prion-like spreading of alpha-synuclein in Parkinson's disease (2017)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28676710/)
[Jucker and Walker, Propagation of pathogenic protein aggregates in neurodegenerative diseases (2018)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30550926/)
[Singleton et al., alpha-Synuclein locus duplication as a cause of familial Parkinson's disease (2003)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1453171/)
[Cremades et al., Direct observation of the interconversion of normal and toxic forms of alpha-synuclein (2012)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22767214/)
[Volpicelli-Daley et al., Formation of alpha-synuclein Lewy pathology in neurons (2016)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27292527/)
[Brundin and Melki, Packed and unpacked: insights into alpha-synuclein aggregation (2017)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28676711/)
[Miller et al., alpha-Synuclein and neurodegeneration (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37542680/)
[Guo et al., alpha-Synuclein strains and seeding in neurodegeneration (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38207129/)
[Braak et al., Staging of nigral pathology in sporadic Parkinson's disease (2003)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12700669/)
[Lee et al., Intercellular transmission of alpha-synuclein (2014)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25147189/)
[Stuendl et al., Induction of alpha-synuclein pathology by extracellular vesicles (2016)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27596520/)
[Mao et al., Pathological alpha-synuclein transmission in Parkinson's disease (2016)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26752267/)
[Recasens et al., Alpha-synuclein strains in Parkinson's disease (2014)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24466424/)
[Choi et al., Microglial activation and alpha-synuclein pathology (2020)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32251387/)
[Braak et al., alpha-Synuclein in brainstem and olfactory bulb (2003)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/14566701/)
[Borghammer et al., Body-first vs brain-first Parkinson's disease (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35951346/)
[Ponnusamy and Sampathu, alpha-Synuclein seed amplification assays (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37221879/)
[Kantarci et al., alpha-Synuclein PET imaging in neurodegenerative disease (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38745219/)
[Volpicelli-Daley and Luk, alpha-Synuclein preformed fibril models of Parkinson's disease (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35248291/)
[Surmeier et al., Calcium, alpha-synuclein and neuronal vulnerability in PD (2017)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28364229/)
[Adler et al., Brain-first vs body-first in Parkinson's disease (2019)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31309746/)
[Tolosa et al., Parkinson's disease (2020)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32896127/)
[Luk et al., The prion-like spread of alpha-synuclein pathology (2014)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25227526/)
[Mahalakshmi et al., Animal models of alpha-synuclein propagation (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36739952/)
[Dickson et al., Neuropathology of Lewy body disease (2018)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29368236/)
[Weigand et al., Computational models of alpha-synuclein propagation (2021)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34916679/)Cellular Mechanisms of Neuronal Vulnerability
Dopaminergic Neuron-Specific Factors
Dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra exhibit unique vulnerabilities to alpha-synuclein propagation:
- Calbindin expression: Low calbindin D28K correlates with vulnerability
- Pax6 expression: Transcription factor driving distinctive phenotype
- Calcium homeostasis: T-type calcium channel reliance
- Mitochondrial dynamics: High fission rate increases ROS
- Axonal architecture: Extensive axonal arborization (1 million terminals per neuron)
The concept of dying-back neurodegeneration applies:
Distal axons degenerate first (dystrophic neurites)
Soma remains initially intact
Retrograde propagation of pathology
Eventually cell deathNon-Dopaminergic Neurons
Other neuronal populations are also affected:
| Neuron Type | Function Affected | Clinical Manifestation |
|-------------|------------------|----------------------|
| Noradrenergic (LC) | Arousal, attention | Depression, orthostasis |
| Serotonergic | Mood, sleep | Depression, anxiety |
| Cholinergic (Basal forebrain) | Memory | Cognitive decline |
| Enteric neurons | GI motility | Constipation |
Glial Involvement
Astrocytes and microglia modulate propagation:
Astrocytes:
- Take up extracellular alpha-synuclein
- May spread pathology to neurons
- Produce inflammatory cytokines
- Can transfer pathology via exosomes
Microglia:
- Phagocytose pathological species
- May inadvertently spread pathology
- Create inflammatory milieu
- Express TREM2 variants affect progression
Propagation and Protein Quality Control
Autophagy Pathways
Cellular clearance systems interact with propagation:
Macroautophagy: Bulk degradation of aggregates
Chaperone-mediated autophagy: Selective monomer clearance
Ubiquitin-proteasome system: Degradation of tagged proteins
Exophagy: Release via exosomesFailure of these systems contributes to:
- Accumulation of oligomers
- Impaired templation inhibition
- Reduced clearance of seeds
Molecular Chaperones
Chaperone proteins regulate alpha-synuclein handling:
- Hsp70: Inhibits aggregation, promotes refolding
- Hsp90: Regulates oligomer clearance
- Hsp40: Prevents misfolding
- DNAJ proteins: Co-chaperones enhancing Hsp70
Therapeutic modulation of chaperones is an active research area.
Propagation and Neuroinflammation
Inflammatory Cascade
Alpha-synuclein propagation triggers neuroinflammation:
Microglial activation: Pattern recognition receptor engagement
Cytokine release: IL-1β, TNF-α, IL-6
Complement activation: Membrane attack complex formation
Blood-brain barrier disruption: Peripheral immune cell infiltrationBidirectional Relationship
Inflammation and propagation form a feed-forward loop:
- Propagation → Inflammation → Enhanced propagation
- Inflammation → Neuronal stress → Increased release
- Activated glia → Spread via extracellular vesicles
Anti-inflammatory Therapies
Clinical trials of anti-inflammatory approaches include:
- Minocycline (failed in PD)
- Pioglitazone (NEOECON trial)
- TNF inhibitors
- TREM2 modulation
Genetic Risk Factors for Propagation
SNCA Mutations
The SNCA gene directly influences propagation:
| Mutation | Effect on Propagation | Phenotype |
|----------|---------------------|-----------|
| A53T | Accelerated | Early-onset PD |
| A30P | Reduced | Late-onset PD |
| E46K | Accelerated | DLB |
| H50Q | Variable | PD/DLB |
| G51D | Mixed | MSA-like |
| p.A53E | Accelerated | Early PD |
Modifier Genes
Other PD genes modify propagation:
- LRRK2 G2019S: Accelerated exosome release
- GBA N370S: Impaired autophagic clearance
- PRKN: Enhanced vulnerability
- PINK1: Mitochondrial quality control
- ATP13A2: Lysosomal dysfunction
Polygenic Risk
GWAS variants collectively influence:
- Age of onset
- Progression rate
- Clinical phenotype
- Treatment response