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Home NEWS Science News Health

UCLA to Head $9M Study Investigating the Connection Between Pesticides, Air Pollutants, and Parkinson’s Disease Risk

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
May 14, 2026
in Health
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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In a groundbreaking initiative poised to deepen our understanding of Parkinson’s disease, UCLA Health is spearheading a $9 million, multi-institutional research endeavor aimed at unraveling the intricate connections between exposure to environmental pollutants—particularly certain pesticides and air pollution—and the onset and progression of Parkinson’s disease. This ambitious three-year project, funded through the Aligning Science Across Parkinson’s (ASAP) partnership with The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research (MJFF), brings together a consortium of leading scientists from UCLA, Cedars-Sinai, and the University of Münster in Germany. Their collective expertise is harnessed to dissect the molecular and cellular pathways that link toxic environmental exposures to the genesis of this debilitating neurodegenerative disorder.

Parkinson’s disease is characterized by the progressive degeneration and death of dopamine-producing neurons in the brain, primarily within the substantia nigra region. This loss leads to the hallmark motor symptoms associated with the disease, including tremors, bradykinesia (slowness of movement), rigidity, and postural instability. Despite being first described nearly two centuries ago, the etiology of Parkinson’s remains incompletely understood. While several genetic mutations have been implicated in familial forms of the disease, the role of environmental factors is increasingly recognized as pivotal in sporadic cases, which constitute the majority.

Previous epidemiological studies, particularly in California’s Central Valley—a region notable for intensive agricultural activity—have identified a compelling correlation between chronic exposure to pesticides such as chlorpyrifos and paraquat, and particulate matter air pollution, with a significantly heightened risk of developing Parkinson’s. These findings have underscored the pressing need to elucidate the precise biological mechanisms by which these environmental toxins contribute to neuronal vulnerability and disease progression.

The current research initiative adopts a multifaceted approach, leveraging state-of-the-art genetic and proteomic analyses. Researchers will derive human dopaminergic neurons from induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) obtained from individuals residing in the Central Valley, representing diverse histories of pesticide and pollutant exposure. By subjecting these neurons to controlled exposures of the implicated toxicants, the team aims to map alterations in DNA methylation patterns, RNA transcription profiles, and protein expression landscapes that may underlie neurodegenerative processes.

Parallel investigations will employ advanced animal models, including zebrafish and murine systems, to observe phenotypic and molecular effects of toxin exposure in vivo. These models offer complementary insights owing to their genetic manipulability and conserved biological pathways relevant to Parkinson’s pathophysiology. Comparative analyses across human-derived cell cultures and animal models will enable the identification of conserved molecular signatures and facilitate hypothesis-driven interventions.

A critical aspect of the project involves integrating genetic susceptibility into the environmental exposure paradigm. It is hypothesized that individual genetic backgrounds modulate the neurotoxic impact of pollutants, possibly explaining variable disease onset and progression rates observed clinically. To test this, researchers plan to genetically engineer variants within human cells and animal models, assessing how these modifications influence vulnerability to toxins and disease phenotypes. Such insights could pave the way for personalized risk stratification and targeted neuroprotective therapies.

Dr. Jeff Bronstein, a leading movement disorder neurologist and director of the Levine Family Center for Movement Disorders at UCLA, emphasizes the novelty and importance of this work, stating, “Understanding a disease this complex requires bringing together expertise across disciplines and institutions. This collaboration and grant funding give us the tools and the scale to ask questions we haven’t been able to answer before.” His leadership exemplifies the translational vision—linking molecular science with clinical need—to ultimately mitigate the global Parkinson’s burden affecting over a million Americans and ten million individuals worldwide.

Complementing this environmental focus, a parallel study funded by the same grant network will explore how cellular stress pathways interface with mitochondrial function—a fundamental driver of cellular health and longevity—in Parkinson’s disease. Early evidence suggests that dysregulated mitochondrial clearance, or mitophagy, exacerbates neuronal damage. UCLA investigators, in collaboration with the University of Dundee, will probe this crosstalk at the molecular level using cultured dopaminergic neurons and human brain tissue, seeking therapeutic strategies that restore mitochondrial integrity and function.

By integrating environmental toxicology, stem cell biology, genetics, and neurobiology, this suite of studies aspires to construct a holistic model of Parkinson’s disease pathogenesis. Unraveling the cascade from pollutant exposure to molecular perturbation, cellular dysfunction, and clinical manifestation holds promise not only for new diagnostic biomarkers but also for innovative interventions that retard or prevent disease progression.

The study’s anticipated timeline spans from June 2024 to 2029, accommodating the complex nature of longitudinal disease modeling and interdisciplinary collaboration. As understanding deepens, the findings are expected to reverberate well beyond academic circles, informing public health policies aimed at reducing harmful exposures and guiding therapeutic development.

In an era where neurodegenerative disorders impose mounting social and economic costs, initiatives such as this underscore the power of science-driven collaboration to confront the unknown. By elucidating the hidden interplay between environment and genetics in Parkinson’s disease, this research could herald a new frontier in preventing or ameliorating one of humanity’s most challenging neurological diseases.

Subject of Research: Environmental pollutant exposure, genetic susceptibility, and molecular mechanisms underlying Parkinson’s disease pathogenesis.

Article Title: Untangling the Environmental Web of Parkinson’s Disease: A Multidisciplinary Quest to Decode Pollutant-Driven Neurodegeneration.

News Publication Date: Not specified.

Web References:
– Aligning Science Across Parkinson’s (ASAP): https://parkinsonsroadmap.org
– The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research (MJFF): https://www.michaeljfox.org/
– ASAP Collaborative Research Network (CRN): https://www.asapcrn.org/

Keywords: Parkinson’s disease, neurodegenerative disease, pesticides, chlorpyrifos, paraquat, air pollution, particulate matter, neurotoxicity, stem cells, induced pluripotent stem cells, dopaminergic neurons, mitochondrial dysfunction, mitophagy, genetics, environmental exposure

Tags: air pollution impact on Parkinson’sAligning Science Across Parkinson’s initiativedopamine neuron degeneration mechanismsenvironmental toxins and brain healthMichael J. Fox Foundation Parkinson’s fundingmolecular pathways in Parkinson’s diseasemulti-institutional neurodegenerative studiesneurotoxic effects of air pollutantsParkinson’s disease environmental risk factorspesticide exposure and neurodegenerationsporadic Parkinson’s disease causesUCLA Parkinson’s disease research

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