“…Although four novel SNVs were identified present in the three affected individuals and absent in large number of control individuals (>10,000), including 188 ethnicity-matched control chromosomes, only one SNV, located in the GIGYF2 gene and not present in the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAc), was predicted to be pathogenic ( Table 1 ). Although the pathogenic role of GIGYF2 in PD remains controversial, 5 the GIGYF2 p.Arg610Gly mutation, which is situated in the GYF domain of the protein that is thought to possess ligand–binding properties, 6 was shown to be highly conserved across different species in both GIGYF1 and GIGYF2 proteins, and was predicted to disrupt the binding between the protein’s GYF domain and its interacting ligands (data not shown). The exon containing the p.Arg610Gly mutation was then sequenced in 107 Spanish PD patients, yielding no additional pathogenic mutation carriers; and the entire coding region of GIGYF2 was sequenced in 45 Spanish PD patients (AAO ranged from 61–81 years), leading to the identification of one novel mutation, p.Lys1006Gln_insQ, which is probably non-pathogenic as it lies within a highly polymorphic polyglutamine repeat, along with other already-reported, non-pathogenic mutations.…”