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Progranulin Haploinsufficiency in Frontotemporal Dementia

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mechanism1947 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Progranulin Haploinsufficiency in Frontotemporal Dementia

Overview

Progranulin haploinsufficiency is the primary disease mechanism underlying the majority of familial frontotemporal dementia cases linked to chromosome 17q21. Heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in the [GRN](/genes/grn) gene reduce progranulin protein levels by approximately 50%, leading to FTLD-TDP Type A pathology. [@baker2006]

This mechanism page explores the molecular cascade from gene mutation to neuronal dysfunction, the role of lysosomal impairment, neuroinflammatory pathways, and current therapeutic strategies targeting this fundamental defect.

Genetic Basis

GRN Mutations and haploinsufficiency

Over 70 pathogenic variants in the [GRN](/genes/grn) gene have been identified, including:

  • Null mutations: Frameshift, nonsense, and splice-site mutations that create premature termination codons
  • Missense mutations: Some variants also cause partial loss of function through protein instability
  • Large deletions/duplications: Copy number variants affecting gene dosage

All pathogenic GRN mutations cause disease through haploinsufficiency — the reduction of functional progranulin protein by ~50% from the wild-type allele. [@cruts2006]

Inheritance Pattern

  • Autosomal dominant: One mutant allele is sufficient to cause disease
  • Age-dependent penetrance: Disease manifests typically between ages 50-80
  • Anticipation: Not typically observed in GRN-FTD

Progranulin Biology

Normal Function


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