LRRK2 Pathway in Parkinson's Disease describes a key molecular or cellular mechanism implicated in neurodegenerative disease. This page provides a detailed overview of the pathway components, signaling cascades, and their relevance to conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and related disorders.
LRRK2 (Leucine-Rich Repeat Kinase 2) is one of the most important genetic risk factors for Parkinson's disease, with mutations causing familial PD and common variants increasing sporadic PD risk. It is also known as dardarin (from the Basque word for trembling), reflecting the tremor phenotype observed in carriers 1.
LRRK2 is a large 2527-amino acid multi-domain protein with both GTPase and kinase activities. It belongs to the ROCO family of proteins, characterized by the presence of ROC (Ras of complex proteins) GTPase domain followed by a COR (C-terminal of ROC) domain and a kinase domain 2.
¶ Domain Structure
- Armadillo repeats (residues 1-300): Mediates protein-protein interactions and localization to membranes including the Golgi apparatus and synaptic vesicles
- Ankyrin repeats (residues 300-500): Scaffold function for substrate recruitment and complex assembly
- Leucine-rich repeats (LRR, residues 500-700): Critical for dimerization and substrate binding specificity
- ROC domain (residues 1335-1510): GTPase activity that allosterically regulates kinase function
- COR domain (residues 1510-1840): Kinase regulation through inter-domain interactions
- Kinase domain (residues 1875-2300): Serine/threonine kinase that phosphorylates downstream substrates
In healthy neurons, LRRK2 performs several critical functions 3:
- Neuronal process outgrowth: Regulates dendritic arborization and axon guidance during development
- Synaptic function: Modulates synaptic vesicle cycling, neurotransmitter release, and plasticity
- Protein translation: Controls mTOR-mediated protein synthesis pathways
- Autophagy and lysosomal function: Regulates macroautophagy and chaperone-mediated autophagy
- Dopaminergic neuron survival: Essential for viability of substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons
- Mitochondrial dynamics: Influences mitochondrial fission/fusion balance and quality control
LRRK2 is widely expressed in the brain with highest levels in:
- Substantia nigra pars compacta: Dopaminergic neurons
- Hippocampus: Pyramidal neurons, dentate gyrus
- Cortex: Layer 5 pyramidal neurons
- Striatum: Medium spiny neurons
- Cerebellum: Purkinje cells
Peripheral expression includes:
- Kidney: High expression in proximal tubules
- Lung: Alveolar macrophages
- Immune cells: Lymphocytes, monocytes
LRRK2 activity is tightly regulated through multiple mechanisms:
- Autophosphorylation: Ser1292 autophosphorylation serves as an activity marker
- Phosphorylation by upstream kinases: DAPK1, CK2, PKA
- 14-3-3 protein binding: Serine 910/935 phosphorylation enables 14-3-3 binding
- Dimerization: Required for full kinase activity
- GTP binding: ROC domain GTP binding enhances kinase activity
Over 100 pathogenic mutations have been identified in LRRK2, with the most common causing autosomal dominant Parkinson's disease 4.
| Mutation |
Effect |
Prevalence |
Geographic Origin |
| G2019S |
↑ Kinase activity (~2-3x) |
~5% familial, ~1% sporadic PD |
Worldwide (Ashkenazi Jewish, Arab) |
| R1441C/G/H |
↓ GTPase activity |
~3% familial PD |
Basque country |
| I2020T |
Alters kinase activity |
Rare |
Japanese families |
| N1437H |
↓ GTPase activity |
Rare |
Northern European |
| Y1699C |
↓ GTPase activity |
Rare |
British, Irish |
The LRRK2 G2019S mutation is the most studied and provides insight into disease mechanisms 5:
- Increased kinase activity: Hyperphosphorylation of substrates leads to aberrant signaling
- Dysregulated GTPase: Altered ROC domain function disrupts signaling dynamics
- Impaired autophagy: Lysosomal dysfunction causes protein accumulation
- Synaptic dysfunction: Dopaminergic neurotransmission deficits occur
- Mitochondrial dysfunction: Energy deficits and increased ROS production
- Neuroinflammation: Microglial activation and inflammatory responses
¶ Penetrance and Age at Onset
- G2019S: 30-80% penetrance by age 80, typical onset 55-65 years
- R1441C/G/H: Variable penetrance, earlier onset possible
- Non-carriers: Sporadic PD typically onset 60-70 years
LRRK2 phosphorylates numerous substrates involved in critical neuronal pathways 6:
The Rab GTPase family is a major LRRK2 substrate family. Rab proteins act as molecular switches controlling vesicular trafficking:
- Rab3A/B: Regulates synaptic vesicle exocytosis and neurotransmitter release
- Rab8A/B: Controls vesicle trafficking and autophagy initiation
- Rab10: Modulates endolysosomal trafficking and phagophore formation
- Rab12: Involved in lysosomal positioning and autophagy
- Rab35: Regulates synaptic vesicle recycling
- Rab43: Controls Golgi-to-endoplasmic reticulum trafficking
- ERK1/2: Extracellular signal-regulated kinases affecting cell survival, differentiation
- MKK4/MKK7: Upstream activators of JNK pathway
- JNK: c-Jun N-terminal kinase stress signaling
- MAP1B: Microtubule-associated protein involved in axon guidance
- TAU: Hyperphosphorylation promotes neurofibrillary tangle formation
- DARPP-32: Dopamine-regulated phosphoprotein in striatal neurons
- RIPK3: Receptor-interacting protein kinase 3, necroptosis signaling
- Ago2: Argonaute 2, microRNA processing
- eIF4E: Translation initiation factor
- GSK3β: Glycogen synthase kinase-3 beta, multiple cellular functions
flowchart TD
A["LRRK2 G2019S"] -->|"Increased Kinase Activity"| B["Hyperphosphorylation of Substrates"]
B --> C["Rab GTPases"]
B --> D["MAPK Pathway"]
B --> E["Tau Pathology"]
B --> F["Autophagy Regulators"]
C --> C1 [Vesicle Trafficking Defects]
C --> C2 [Synaptic Dysfunction]
C --> C3 [Protein Sorting Errors]
D --> D1 ["ERK Hyperactivation"]
D --> D2 ["JNK/c-Jun Activation"]
E --> E1 ["Tau Hyperphosphorylation"]
E --> E2 ["NFT Formation Acceleration"]
F --> F1 [Autophagosome Formation Defects]
F --> F2 [Lysosomal Trafficking Impairment]
C1 --> G["Dopaminergic Neuron Death"]
C2 --> G
C3 --> G
D1 --> G
D2 --> G
E1 --> G
E2 --> G
F1 --> G
F2 --> G
H["Mitochondrial Dysfunction"] --> G
I["Neuroinflammation"] --> G
Several LRRK2 kinase inhibitors have entered clinical development 7:
| Drug |
Company |
Status |
ClinicalTrials.gov |
| DNL151 (Birodonersen) |
Denali/Diurnal |
Phase II |
NCT04056689 |
| BIIB122 |
Biogen/Denali |
Phase II |
NCT05418660 |
| G021249 |
Genentech |
Phase I |
NCT03976375 |
| G053D |
Genentech |
Phase I |
NCT04584693 |
| PF-06447475 |
Pfizer |
Preclinical |
- |
| MLi-2 |
Merck |
Preclinical |
- |
Challenges in Drug Development:
- Achieving sufficient brain penetration
- Peripheral toxicity (lung, kidney effects due to LRRK2 expression)
- Safety margin for kinase inhibition
- Biomarker development for target engagement
- Long-term treatment duration needed
The ROC domain represents an alternative target 8:
- Allosteric modulators: Bind to stabilize inactive conformation
- GTP analogs: Competitive inhibitors at GTP binding site
- Dimerization disrupters: Prevent ROC domain dimerization
- ASOs: Antisense oligonucleotides targeting LRRK2 mRNA for degradation
- AAV-delivered shRNA: Viral vector-mediated knockdown
- CRISPR-based editing: Allele-specific targeting of mutant allele
- RNA aptamers: Decoy molecules sequestering LRRK2
| Approach |
Mechanism |
Status |
Development Stage |
| Autophagy enhancers |
Restore lysosomal function |
Preclinical |
Laboratory |
| Mitochondrial protectants |
Reduce oxidative stress |
Phase II |
Clinical |
| Anti-inflammatory agents |
Modulate microglia |
Phase II |
Clinical |
| Neurotrophic factors |
Support neuron survival |
Phase I |
Clinical |
| Antioxidants |
Scavenge ROS |
Phase III |
Clinical |
LRRK2 testing is recommended for:
- Patients with early-onset PD (<50 years) with family history
- Populations with known founder mutations (Basque, Ashkenazi Jewish)
- Cases with atypical features (e.g., foot dystonia)
- Patients with LRRK2-associated comorbidities
- Phospho-Rab10: Peripheral biomarker in blood cells, most validated
- Phospho-LRRK2 (Ser1292): Autophosphorylation marker
- Neuroimaging: PET ligands for LRRK2 expression (under development)
- CSF biomarkers: Total tau, neurofilament light chain, alpha-synuclein
- Kinase inhibitor trials: Consider enrollment in clinical trials
- Symptomatic treatment: Standard PD medications remain appropriate
- Genetic counseling: Family screening and reproductive planning
- Lifestyle interventions: Exercise, diet, sleep optimization
- Monitoring: Regular assessment of motor and non-motor symptoms
- LRRK2 G2019S transgenic mice: Show age-dependent motor deficits and dopaminergic neuron loss
- LRRK2 knockout mice: Viable with mild phenotypes, suggesting compensation
- LRRK2 R1441G knockin mice: Model GTPase domain dysfunction
- Reduced striatal dopamine release
- Altered locomotor activity
- Impaired rotational behavior
- Alpha-synuclein inclusions
- Gliosis and inflammation
- Incomplete phenocopy of human PD
- Variable penetrance
- Species differences in LRRK2 biology
| Target |
Application |
Vendor |
| Phospho-LRRK2 (Ser1292) |
Autophosphorylation detection |
Abcam, Thermo Fisher |
| Phospho-LRRK2 (Ser935) |
Phosphorylation site |
Abcam, CST |
| Total LRRK2 |
Expression analysis |
Abcam, Novus |
| Phospho-Rab10 |
Substrate detection |
Abcam |
| Rab10 total |
Loading control |
Abcam |
- Kinase activity assays: Radiometric and fluorescence-based methods
- GTPase assays: GTP gamma S hydrolysis measurements
- Cellular localization: Fractionation and microscopy
- Protein-protein interactions: Co-immunoprecipitation
flowchart LR
subgraph LRRK2_Complex
A["LRRK2"] --> B["14-3-3 Proteins"]
A --> C["Heat Shock Proteins"]
A --> D["Rabenosyn-5"]
end
subgraph Downstream
A --> E["Rab GTPases"]
A --> F["MAPK Pathway"]
A --> G["mTOR Pathway"]
end
subgraph Cellular_Effects
E --> H["Vesicle Trafficking"]
F --> I["Cell Stress Response"]
G --> J["Protein Synthesis"]
end
subgraph Disease_Pathology
H --> K["Synaptic Dysfunction"]
I --> L["Apoptosis"]
J --> M["Protein Aggregation"]
end
| Trial ID |
Drug |
Phase |
Population |
Primary Endpoint |
| NCT04056689 |
DNL151 |
II |
LRRK2-PD |
Safety, tolerability |
| NCT05418660 |
BIIB122 |
II |
LRRK2-PD |
Safety, biomarker |
| NCT03976375 |
G021249 |
I |
Healthy volunteers |
Safety, PK |
| NCT04584693 |
G053D |
I |
Healthy volunteers |
Safety, PK |
- NCT02982095: First-in-human study of DNL151
- NCT03710721: Single ascending dose study
- NCT04011314: Multiple ascending dose study
LRRK2-PD brains show characteristic pathological features:
- Lewy bodies: Alpha-synuclein positive inclusions in surviving neurons
- Neuronal loss: Particularly in substantia nigra pars compacta
- Gliosis: Reactive astrocytes and microglia
- Tau pathology: Variable severity of neurofibrillary tangles
- Similar overall pathology but often less severe
- Earlier onset but slower progression in some cases
- Variable response to levodopa
- Brain-penetrant inhibitors: Next-generation molecules with improved CNS exposure
- Allele-specific ASOs: Targeting mutant allele only
- Protein degraders: LRRK2 PROTACs for targeted protein degradation
- Combination therapies: Inhibitors plus neuroprotective agents
- PET tracers for LRRK2 imaging
- Blood-based phospho-Rab10 standardization
- CSF biomarker validation
- Genotype-stratified clinical trials
- Personalized treatment based on mutation type
- Pre-symptomatic intervention for carriers
LRRK2 inhibitor development represents significant investment:
- Preclinical development: $50-100M
- Phase I trials: $15-30M
- Phase II trials: $30-60M
- Phase III trials: $100-200M
- Total estimated: $200-400M per successful drug
- Global PD market: ~$8B annually
- LRRK2-targeted therapies: Potential $500M-2B market
- Disease-modifying treatments: Premium pricing potential
¶ Patient Support and Resources
- Michael J. Fox Foundation: LRRK2 research funding and patient resources
- Parkinson's Foundation: Educational materials and support programs
- Parkinson's UK: Research initiatives and patient community
- Clinical genetic testing: Available through certified laboratories
- Preimplantation genetic diagnosis: For family planning
- Carrier screening: For at-risk populations
- ClinicalTrials.gov: Searchable database of LRRK2 trials
- Fox Trial Finder: Michael J. Fox Foundation matching platform
- Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI): Longitudinal study enrolling LRRK2 carriers
The Michael J. Fox Foundation has invested over $100 million in LRRK2 research since 2006, making it one of the largest single-gene investments in Parkinson's disease research history.