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GCase and Lysosomal Function in Parkinson's Disease

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wiki page Created: 2026-04-02T07:19:59 By: crosslink-migration Quality: 50% ✓ SciDEX ID: wiki-mechanisms-gcase-lysosomal-pathway
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GCase and Lysosomal Function in Parkinson's Disease

Overview

Glucocerebrosidase (GCase), encoded by the GBA1 gene, is a lysosomal enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of glucosylceramide to ceramide and glucose. GCase deficiency, whether due to GBA1 mutations (causing Gaucher disease) or sporadic dysfunction in Parkinson's disease (PD), leads to lysosomal impairment and contributes to α-synuclein aggregation—a central pathogenic mechanism in PD[@sidransky2009]. The discovery that GBA1 mutations increase PD risk 5-20-fold provided definitive genetic evidence linking lysosomal dysfunction to PD pathogenesis.

GCase and α-Synuclein Relationship

GCase deficiency leads to glucosylceramide accumulation, which directly promotes α-synuclein aggregation through multiple mechanisms[@mazzulli2012]. Glucosylceramide stabilizes toxic oligomeric α-synuclein species, facilitating the formation of β-sheet-rich fibrils that characterize Lewy bodies. Studies demonstrate that GCase activity is reduced in both GBA-PD patients and sporadic PD patients without GBA mutations, suggesting that impaired GCase function is a common pathway in PD pathogenesis[@gegg2015].

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mechanisms-gcase-lysosomal-pathway
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