Researchers in Taiwan conducted the first large-scale genome-wide association study (GWAS) of Parkinson's disease in a Taiwanese population. A GWAS is like scanning every chapter of a person's DNA instruction book across thousands of people to find stretches that appear more often in people with a disease than without it. The team compared the DNA of 2,245 people with Parkinson's to 2,268 healthy controls — all of Taiwanese ancestry — and tested roughly 7.6 million genetic variants.
The study confirmed that variants near the SNCA gene (which codes for alpha-synuclein, the protein that clumps in Parkinson's brains) and the MCCC1 gene raise disease risk in Taiwan. Crucially, the SNCA signal sits on a stretch of DNA specific to East Asians — different from the signal seen in European studies — underlining that genetic risk is not one-size-fits-all. The team also confirmed two LRRK2 gene variants common in East Asians (p.G2385R and p.R1628P) and found a striking gene-dosage effect: carrying one variant raised risk ~1.5-fold; carrying both raised it about 4-fold. A suggestive new signal at PPARGC1A — a gene governing how cells build energy in their mitochondria — also emerged but needs replication. Finally, the researchers showed that genetic risk scores (tools that add many risk variants into one number) built from European data work only modestly in Taiwanese patients (AUC 0.59), and that adding East-Asian and Taiwan-specific variants meaningfully improves accuracy (AUC 0.62).
For patients and families of East Asian ancestry, this study is a step toward genetic testing and risk tools that actually reflect their biology. The LRRK2 double-dose finding is particularly actionable: people who carry both East Asian LRRK2 variants may be priority candidates for LRRK2-targeted drugs now in clinical trials, and genetic counselling is worth discussing with a neurologist. Polygenic risk scores are not yet a standard clinical test, but this work lays the groundwork for ancestry-matched tools likely available within a few years as research matures.