This report describes Parkinson disease (postulated), GPR37-related. GPR37, also known as PAELR, is a transmembrane receptor that has been shown to interact with PARK2, the gene implicated in Parkinson disease 2 (FBhh0000008). An insoluble form of GPR37 protein has been shown to accumulate in the brains of PARK2 patients and is postulated to be a causative factor in the selective neuronal cell death observed in these patients (Imai et al., 2001; pubmed:11439185). There are two moderate-scoring orthologs of GPR37 in Drosophila (CCHa1-R and CCHa2-R), but both fly genes have multiple higher-scoring orthologs in human.
A UAS construct of a wild-type Hsap\GPR37 gene has been introduced into flies. Neural-specific expression causes age-dependent degeneration of dopaminergic neurons and locomotor-defective phenotypes. Genetic interactions with candidate genes have been characterized, using the DA neuron degeneration phenotype.
[updated June 2016 by FlyBase; FBrf0222196]
Parkinson disease (PD) is a neurodegenerative disease usually typified by slow onset in mid to late adulthood; there are also early-onset and juvenile forms of the disease. Symptoms worsen over time and include resting tremor, muscular rigidity, bradykinesia [abnormal slowness of movement], and postural instability [impaired balance and coordination]; additional symptoms may include postural abnormalities, dysautonomia [symptoms caused by malfunction of the autonomic nervous system], dystonic cramps, and dementia. Parkinson disease is the second-most common neurodegenerative disease (after Alzheimer disease), affecting approximately 1% of the population over 50 (Polymeropoulos et al., 1996, pubmed:8895469). [from MIM:168600; 2013.07.23]
Parkinson disease is described as early-onset disease if signs and symptoms begin before age 50. Early-onset cases that begin before age 20 may be referred to as juvenile-onset disease. [from Genetics Home Reference, GHR_condition:parkinson-disease, 2015.02.13]
The GPR37 gene encodes a transmembrane polypeptide, a member of the G-protein-coupled receptor family; it is found in cell and endoplasmic reticulum membranes. [from Gene Cards, GPR37; 2016.06.21]