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Home - Medicine - The genetic clock of Parkinson’s: ancestry and environment set the tempo

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The genetic clock of Parkinson’s: ancestry and environment set the tempo

Last updated: February 26, 2026 12:44 pm
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The genetic clock of Parkinson’s: ancestry and environment set the tempo

A large international study reveals that the age at which Parkinson’s disease manifests in carriers of the LRRK2 p.Gly2019Ser mutation is not uniform. Researchers analyzed data from over 900 carriers across different ancestries and countries, finding a significant 10-year gap in median age at onset. Notably, individuals of North African ancestry and those living in Tunisia and Israel developed symptoms years earlier than those of European ancestry or living in the United States. This suggests that both genetic background and environmental or geographical factors play a substantial role in modifying the disease course.

Why it might matter to you:
This work underscores the importance of gene-environment interactions in determining the onset of neurological disorders, a concept highly relevant to neurodevelopmental research. It highlights the need to consider population-specific genetic modifiers and environmental exposures when studying disease mechanisms, which could refine predictive models and therapeutic strategies for genetically defined conditions.


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