Parent Title:
Effects-Related Biomarkers of Environmental Neurotoxic Exposures
Grant Number:
Principal Investigator:
Zhang, Jing
Institution:
University of Washington
Most Recent Award Year:
2009
Lifestage of Participants:
Exposure:
Adulthood (18+ years)
Assessment:
Adulthood (18+ years)
Exposures:
Metals:
Manganese
Health Outcomes:
Neurological / Cognitive Outcomes:
Parkinsonism
Biological Sample:
Plasma
Abstract:
Environmental exposure to metals, including manganese, is an important risk factor for the development of parkinsonism (PS) in workers of welding or related industries. However, the relevance of metal-mediated PS to idiopathic Parkinson's disease (iPD) remains to be characterized. Clinically, differential diagnosis between metal-related PS and iPD is difficult, even in the best hands. This proposal is focused on discovering plasma biochemical markers unique to welders for differential diagnosis of various PS, monitoring PS progression, and identification of the population at risk for developing disabling PS. The techniques to be utilized are state-of-the-art proteomics that are actively employed currently in our laboratory in revealing biomarkers specific to iPD in both human brain tissue and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Three specific aims are designed for the current proposal: 1) to differentiate PS in the plasma samples of welders from those of iPD using brain/CSF specific markers identified in iPD patients, 2) to develop plasma biomarkers unique to PS progression as well as early stages in welders using targeted and nonbiased quantitative proteomics, and 3) to confirm and validate PS plasma biomarkers in welders, which is a key process of biomarker discovery. The significance of this investigation includes: 1) identification of markers unique to PS, both in symptomatic welders and those at risk for developing PS, will help diagnose and monitor these patients as well as make it possible to remove the subjects at risk from the environment, thereby preventing them from developing PS; 2) identification of protein markers unique to PS secondary to metal exposure likely suggests novel pathogenesis and therapeutic targets for the disease process; and 3) PS markers, if identified, can be widely utilized, given that plasma-based assays can be readily implemented in a clinical setting, even in developing countries or in remote areas of developed countries.
ExpandCollapse Abstract
Related NIEHS-Funded Study Populations
Parkinsonism and Metal Exposures Among Welders
Principal Investigator:
Racette, Brad; Checkoway, Harvey
| Study Population Page Study Population c116
Institution:
Washington University
Location:
Wisconsin
Number of Participants::
875 welders and 200 controls
Brief Description::
This is an occupational cohort study examining how exposure to manganese and other metals affects the risk, severity, and progression of Parkinsonism and Parkinson’s disease among professional welders. Since 2005, the study has enrolled 875 Wisconsin shipyard welders (775 actively employed, 100 retired) and 200 non-exposed shipyard workers.