Giuseppe Meco
Sapienza University of Rome
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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Meco.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 2000
Christoph B. Lücking; Alexandra Durr; Bonifati; Jenny Vaughan; G. De Michele; Thomas Gasser; Biswadjiet S. Harhangi; Giuseppe Meco; Patrice Denefle; Nicholas W. Wood; Yves Agid; Alexis Brice; French Parkinsons Dis Genetics Stu
BACKGROUND Mutations in the parkin gene have recently been identified in patients with early-onset Parkinsons disease, but the frequency of the mutations and the associated phenotype have not been assessed in a large series of patients. METHODS We studied 73 families in which at least one of the affected family members was affected at or before the age of 45 years and had parents who were not affected, as well as 100 patients with isolated Parkinsons disease that began at or before the age of 45 years. All subjects were screened for mutations in the parkin gene with use of a semiquantitative polymerase-chain-reaction assay that simultaneously amplified several exons. We sequenced the coding exons in a subgroup of patients. We also compared the clinical features of patients with parkin mutations and those without mutations. RESULTS Among the families with early-onset Parkinsons disease, 36 (49 percent) had parkin mutations. The age at onset ranged from 7 to 58 years. Among the patients with isolated Parkinsons disease, mutations were detected in 10 of 13 patients (77 percent) with an age at onset of 20 years or younger, but in only 2 of 64 patients (3 percent) with an age at onset of more than 30 years. The mean (+/-SD) age at onset in the patients with parkin mutations was younger than that in those without mutations (32+/-11 vs. 42+/-11 years, P<0.001), and they were more likely to have symmetric involvement and dystonia at onset, to have hyperreflexia at onset or later, to have a good response to levodopa therapy, and to have levodopa-induced dyskinesias during treatment. Nineteen different rearrangements of exons (deletions and multiplications) and 16 different point mutations were detected. CONCLUSIONS Mutations in the parkin gene are a major cause of early-onset autosomal recessive familial Parkinsons disease and isolated juvenile-onset Parkinsons disease (at or before the age of 20 years). Accurate diagnosis of these cases cannot be based only on the clinical manifestations of the disease.
The Lancet | 2005
Alessio Di Fonzo; Christan F. Rohé; Joaquim J. Ferreira; Hsin H.F. Chien; Laura Vacca; Fabrizio Stocchi; Leonor Correia Guedes; Edito Fabrizio; Mario Manfredi; Nicola Vanacore; Stefano Goldwurm; Guido J. Breedveld; Cristina Sampaio; Giuseppe Meco; Egberto Reis Barbosa; Ben A. Oostra; Vincenzo Bonifati
Mutations in the LRRK2 gene have been identified in families with autosomal dominant parkinsonism. We amplified and sequenced the coding region of LRRK2 from genomic DNA by PCR, and identified a heterozygous mutation (Gly2019 ser) present in four of 61 (6.6%) unrelated families with Parkinsons disease and autosomal dominant inheritance. The families originated from Italy, Portugal, and Brazil, indicating the presence of the mutation in different populations. The associated phenotype was broad, including early and late disease onset. These findings confirm the association of LRRK2 with neurodegeneration, and identify a common mutation associated with dominantly inherited Parkinsons disease.
Neurological Sciences | 2003
Vincenzo Bonifati; Patrizia Rizzu; Ferdinando Squitieri; Elmar Krieger; Nicola Vanacore; J. C. van Swieten; Alexis Brice; C. M. van Duijn; Ben A. Oostra; Giuseppe Meco; Peter Heutink
Abstract.Four chromosomal loci (PARK2, PARK6, PARK7, and PARK9) associated with autosomal recessive, early onset parkinsonism are known. We mapped the PARK7 locus to chromosome 1p36 in a large family from a genetically isolated population in the Netherlands, and confirmed this linkage in an Italian family. By positional cloning within the refined PARK7 critical region we recently identified mutations in the DJ-1 gene in the two PARK7-linked families. The function of DJ-1 remains largely unknown, but evidence from genetic studies on the yeast DJ-1 homologue, and biochemical studies in murine and human cell lines, suggests a role for DJ-1 as an antioxidant and/or a molecular chaperone. Elucidating the role of DJ-1 will lead to a better understanding of the pathogenesis of DJ-1-related and common forms of Parkinson’s disease.
Annals of Neurology | 2003
Ebba Lohmann; Magali Periquet; Vincenzo Bonifati; Nicholas W. Wood; Giuseppe De Michele; Anne-Marie Bonnet; Valérie Fraix; Emmanuel Broussolle; M.W.I.M. Horstink; Marie Vidailhet; Patrice Verpillat; Thomas Gasser; David Nicholl; Hélio A.G. Teive; Salmo Raskin; Olivier Rascol; Alain Destée; Merle Ruberg; Francesca Gasparini; Giuseppe Meco; Yves Agid; Alexandra Durr; Alexis Brice
To establish phenotype–genotype correlations in early‐onset parkinsonism, we have compared the phenotype of a large series of 146 patients with and 250 patients without parkin mutations. Although no single sign distinguished the groups, patients with mutations had significantly earlier and more symmetrical onset, dystonia more often at onset and hyperreflexia, slower progression of the disease, and a tendency toward a greater response to levodopa despite lower doses. After forward stepwise multiple logistic regression analysis, dystonia at onset and brisk reflexes were not longer significantly different but were correlated with age at onset rather than the presence of the parkin mutation. Age at onset in carriers of parkin mutations varied as did the rate of progression of the disease: the younger the age at onset the slower the evolution. The genotype influenced the phenotype: carriers of at least one missense mutation had a higher United Parkinsons Disease Rating Scale motor score than those carrying two truncating mutations. The localization of the mutations was also important because missense mutations in functional domains of parkin resulted in earlier onset. Patients with a single heterozygous mutation had significantly later and more asymmetrical onset and more frequent levodopa‐induced fluctuations and dystonia than patients with two mutations. Ann Neurol 2003
Neurology | 2007
A. Di Fonzo; Hsin Fen Chien; M. Socal; S. Giraudo; Cristina Tassorelli; G. Iliceto; Giovanni Fabbrini; Roberto Marconi; Emiliana Fincati; Giovanni Abbruzzese; P. Marini; F. Squitieri; M.W.I.M. Horstink; Pasquale Montagna; A. Dalla Libera; Fabrizio Stocchi; Stefano Goldwurm; Joaquim J. Ferreira; Giuseppe Meco; Emilia Martignoni; Leonardo Lopiano; Laura Bannach Jardim; Ben A. Oostra; Egberto Reis Barbosa; Vincenzo Bonifati; Nicola Vanacore; Edito Fabrizio; N. Locuratolo; C. Scoppetta; Mario Manfredi
Objective: To assess the prevalence, nature, and associated phenotypes of ATP13A2 gene mutations among patients with juvenile parkinsonism (onset <21 years) or young onset (between 21 and 40 years) Parkinson disease (YOPD). Methods: We studied 46 patients, mostly from Italy or Brazil, including 11 with juvenile parkinsonism and 35 with YOPD. Thirty-three cases were sporadic and 13 had positive family history compatible with autosomal recessive inheritance. Forty-two had only parkinsonian signs, while four (all juvenile-onset) had multisystemic involvement. The whole ATP13A2 coding region (29 exons) and exon-intron boundaries were sequenced from genomic DNA. Results: A novel homozygous missense mutation (Gly504Arg) was identified in one sporadic case from Brazil with juvenile parkinsonism. This patient had symptoms onset at age 12, levodopa-responsive severe akinetic-rigid parkinsonism, levodopa-induced motor fluctuations and dyskinesias, severe visual hallucinations, and supranuclear vertical gaze paresis, but no pyramidal deficit nor dementia. Brain CT scan showed moderate diffuse atrophy. Furthermore, two Italian cases with YOPD without atypical features carried a novel missense mutation (Thr12Met, Gly533Arg) in single heterozygous state. Conclusions: We confirm that ATP13A2 homozygous mutations are associated with human parkinsonism, and expand the associated genotypic and clinical spectrum, by describing a homozygous missense mutation in this gene in a patient with a phenotype milder than that initially associated with ATP13A2 mutations (Kufor-Rakeb syndrome). Our data also suggest that ATP13A2 single heterozygous mutations might be etiologically relevant for patients with YOPD and further studies of this gene in Parkinson disease are warranted.
Lancet Neurology | 2013
Gregor K. Wenning; Felix Geser; Florian Krismer; Klaus Seppi; Susanne Duerr; Sylvia Boesch; Martin Köllensperger; Georg Goebel; Karl P. Pfeiffer; Paolo Barone; Maria Teresa Pellecchia; Niall Quinn; Vasiliki Koukouni; Clare J. Fowler; Anette Schrag; Christopher J. Mathias; Nir Giladi; Tanya Gurevich; Erik Dupont; Karen Østergaard; Christer Nilsson; Håkan Widner; Wolfgang H. Oertel; Karla Eggert; Alberto Albanese; Francesca Del Sorbo; Eduardo Tolosa; Adriana Cardozo; Günther Deuschl; Helge Hellriegel
Summary Background Multiple system atrophy (MSA) is a fatal and still poorly understood degenerative movement disorder that is characterised by autonomic failure, cerebellar ataxia, and parkinsonism in various combinations. Here we present the final analysis of a prospective multicentre study by the European MSA Study Group to investigate the natural history of MSA. Methods Patients with a clinical diagnosis of MSA were recruited and followed up clinically for 2 years. Vital status was ascertained 2 years after study completion. Disease progression was assessed using the unified MSA rating scale (UMSARS), a disease-specific questionnaire that enables the semiquantitative rating of autonomic and motor impairment in patients with MSA. Additional rating methods were applied to grade global disease severity, autonomic symptoms, and quality of life. Survival was calculated using a Kaplan-Meier analysis and predictors were identified in a Cox regression model. Group differences were analysed by parametric tests and non-parametric tests as appropriate. Sample size estimates were calculated using a paired two-group t test. Findings 141 patients with moderately severe disease fulfilled the consensus criteria for MSA. Mean age at symptom onset was 56·2 (SD 8·4) years. Median survival from symptom onset as determined by Kaplan-Meier analysis was 9·8 years (95% CI 8·1–11·4). The parkinsonian variant of MSA (hazard ratio [HR] 2·08, 95% CI 1·09–3·97; p=0·026) and incomplete bladder emptying (HR 2·10, 1·02–4·30; p=0·044) predicted shorter survival. 24-month progression rates of UMSARS activities of daily living, motor examination, and total scores were 49% (9·4 [SD 5·9]), 74% (12·9 [8·5]), and 57% (21·9 [11·9]), respectively, relative to baseline scores. Autonomic symptom scores progressed throughout the follow-up. Shorter symptom duration at baseline (OR 0·68, 0·5–0·9; p=0·006) and absent levodopa response (OR 3·4, 1·1–10·2; p=0·03) predicted rapid UMSARS progression. Sample size estimation showed that an interventional trial with 258 patients (129 per group) would be able to detect a 30% effect size in 1-year UMSARS motor examination decline rates at 80% power. Interpretation Our prospective dataset provides new insights into the evolution of MSA based on a follow-up period that exceeds that of previous studies. It also represents a useful resource for patient counselling and planning of multicentre trials. Funding Fifth Framework Programme of the European Union, the Oesterreichische Nationalbank, and the Austrian Science Fund.
Journal of Medical Genetics | 2005
Stefano Goldwurm; A. Di Fonzo; Erik J. Simons; Christan F. Rohé; Michela Zini; Margherita Canesi; Silvana Tesei; Anna Zecchinelli; Angelo Antonini; Claudio Mariani; Nicoletta Meucci; Giorgio Sacilotto; Francesca Sironi; G Salani; Joaquim J. Ferreira; Hsin Fen Chien; Edito Fabrizio; Nicola Vanacore; A. Dalla Libera; Fabrizio Stocchi; C. Diroma; Paolo Lamberti; Cristina Sampaio; Giuseppe Meco; Egberto Reis Barbosa; Aida M. Bertoli-Avella; Guido J. Breedveld; Ben A. Oostra; Gianni Pezzoli; Vincenzo Bonifati
Background: Mutations in the gene Leucine-Rich Repeat Kinase 2 (LRRK2) were recently identified as the cause of PARK8 linked autosomal dominant Parkinson’s disease. Objective: To study recurrent LRRK2 mutations in a large sample of patients from Italy, including early (<50 years) and late onset familial and sporadic Parkinson’s disease. Results: Among 629 probands, 13 (2.1%) were heterozygous carriers of the G2019S mutation. The mutation frequency was higher among familial (5.1%, 9/177) than among sporadic probands (0.9%, 4/452) (p<0.002), and highest among probands with one affected parent (8.7%, 6/69) (p<0.001). There was no difference in the frequency of the G2019S mutation in probands with early v late onset disease. Among 600 probands, one heterozygous R1441C but no R1441G or Y1699C mutations were detected. None of the four mutations was found in Italian controls. Haplotype analysis in families from five countries suggested that the G2019S mutation originated from a single ancient founder. The G2019S mutation was associated with the classical Parkinson’s disease phenotype and a broad range of onset age (34 to 73 years). Conclusions: G2019S is the most common genetic determinant of Parkinson’s disease identified so far. It is especially frequent among cases with familial Parkinson’s disease of both early and late onset, but less common among sporadic cases. These findings have important implications for diagnosis and genetic counselling in Parkinson’s disease.
Journal of Neurology | 2001
Marina Gasparini; Vincenzo Bonifati; Edito Fabrizio; Giovanni Fabbrini; Livia Brusa; Gian Luigi Lenzi; Giuseppe Meco
Abstract 27 patients with essential tremor (ET) were studied to determine the cognitive feature of this condition. 15 familial cases and 12 cases with a family history Parkinsons disease (PD) were identified. Performances on frontal lobe tasks of ET patients were compared with those of 15 patients with PD and 15 healthy control subjects. The ET patients showed significant impairments both in attentional and conceptual thinking tasks, similar to those observed in the PD group. Despite the nosographic independence of the two conditions, data showed that the frontal lobe feature of ET was similar to those of PD, thus possibly suggesting a common dysregulation of dopamine pathways.
European Journal of Human Genetics | 2006
Alessio Di Fonzo; Cristina Tassorelli; Michele De Mari; Hsin F. Chien; Joaquim J. Ferreira; Christan F. Rohé; Giulio Riboldazzi; Angelo Antonini; Gianni Albani; Alessandro Mauro; Roberto Marconi; Giovanni Abbruzzese; Leonardo Lopiano; Emiliana Fincati; Marco Guidi; P. Marini; Fabrizio Stocchi; Marco Onofrj; Vincenzo Toni; Michele Tinazzi; Giovanni Fabbrini; Paolo Lamberti; Nicola Vanacore; Giuseppe Meco; Petra Leitner; Ryan J. Uitti; Zbigniew K. Wszolek; Thomas Gasser; Erik J. Simons; Guido J. Breedveld
Mutations in the gene leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) have been recently identified in families with Parkinsons disease (PD). However, the prevalence and nature of LRRK2 mutations, the polymorphism content of the gene, and the associated phenotypes remain poorly understood. We performed a comprehensive study of this gene in a large sample of families with Parkinsons disease compatible with autosomal dominant inheritance (ADPD). The full-length open reading frame and splice sites of the LRRK2 gene (51 exons) were studied by genomic sequencing in 60 probands with ADPD (83% Italian). Pathogenic mutations were identified in six probands (10%): the heterozygous p.G2019S mutation in four (6.6%), and the heterozygous p.R1441C mutation in two (3.4%) probands. A further proband carried the heterozygous p.I1371 V mutation, for which a pathogenic role could not be established with certainty. In total, 13 novel disease-unrelated variants and three intronic changes of uncertain significance were also characterized. The phenotype associated with LRRK2 pathogenic mutations is the one of typical PD, but with a broad range of onset ages (mean 55.2, range 38–68 years) and, in some cases, slow disease progression. On the basis of the comprehensive study in a large sample, we conclude that pathogenic LRRK2 mutations are frequent in ADPD, and they cluster in the C-terminal half of the encoded protein. These data have implications both for understanding the molecular mechanisms of PD, and for directing the genetic screening in clinical practice.
Movement Disorders | 2005
Francesca Romana Pezzella; Carlo Colosimo; Nicola Vanacore; Simone Di Rezze; Melania Chianese; Giovanni Fabbrini; Giuseppe Meco
Hedonistic homeostatic dysregulation (HHD) is a neuropsychiatric disorder recently described in Parkinsons disease (PD), which is characterized by self‐medication and addiction to dopaminergic drugs. To understand the prevalence of this disorder, we screened 202 PD patients attending our movement disorder unit for HHD. The clinical features of the patients identified as affected by this syndrome were then compared with those of control PD patients in an attempt to ascertain the possible risk factors for HHD. Results showed 7 subjects who fulfilled the HHD criteria. The analysis of a case–control study showed a significant correlation between HHD and a previous history of mood disorders, and the use of dopamine agonists, either in monotherapy or in combination. The prevalence of HHD in our study is similar to the one reported in the United Kingdom by the authors who first described this syndrome in PD. Of interest, our patients showed a somewhat different pattern of the disorder, suggesting that cultural and environmental factors may play a role in the phenomenology of HHD.