# Cutaneous α-Synuclein and Age Spots in Neurodegeneration: A Systematic Review and Testable Hypothesis

**Authors:** Arianna Di Stadio, Pietro De Luca, Beatrice Francavilla, Massimo Ralli, Stefano Di Girolamo, Iole Indovina, Giulia Ciccarese, Laura Dipietro

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/ijms27010096 · International Journal of Molecular Sciences · 2025-12-22

## TL;DR

This paper reviews whether age spots on the skin could indicate early signs of neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson's.

## Contribution

The paper proposes a novel hypothesis linking skin age spots with α-synuclein accumulation in neurodegenerative diseases.

## Key findings

- Phosphorylated α-synuclein is found in skin biopsies of patients with Parkinson's and MSA.
- Age spots may be visible indicators of α-synuclein accumulation in the skin.
- Skin changes could serve as noninvasive early markers for neurodegenerative diseases.

## Abstract

Recent studies have identified phosphorylated α-synuclein in the skin of individuals with neurodegenerative disease. The levels of this protein in the skin have been correlated with disease severity. This protein has been specifically studied in alpha-synucleinopathies such as Parkinsons’ Disease (PD) and Multiple System Atrophy (MSA). Given that skin biopsy studies have often shown high levels of phosphorylated α-synuclein in the neck area, and that other clinical studies have described easily identifiable changes in facial skin features, this systematic review explores whether age spots, which are very common in sun-exposed areas (hands and face), could serve as early indicators of neurodegenerative disease. We performed a systematic review of the literature in three databases (Google, Scopus and Pubmed) following PRISMA guidelines. We used the following keywords: “alpha-synuclein and skin”, “alpha-synuclein and skin spots”, “alpha-synuclein and solar lentigo”, “alpha-synuclein and age spots”, “alpha-synuclein and melanocytes”, “skin biopsy and synucleinopathies”, “skin biopsy and neurodegenerative disease”, and “Parkinson’s Disease. Eleven studies were identified and included. Based on the study results and preliminary evidence in the literature evaluating the effect of α-synuclein on keratinocytes and melanocytes, we propose that the accumulation of this protein within the skin may produce visible alterations that can be quantified to enable early, noninvasive detection of neurodegenerative disease.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Parkinsons’ Disease (MONDO:0005180), Multiple System Atrophy (MONDO:0007803), neurodegenerative disease (MONDO:0005559)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** SNCA (synuclein alpha) [NCBI Gene 6622] {aka NACP, PARK1, PARK4, PD1}
- **Diseases:** solar lentigo (MESH:D007911), MSA (MESH:D019578), alpha-synucleinopathies (MESH:D000080874), neurodegenerative disease (MESH:D019636), PD (MESH:D010300)

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12786030/full.md

## References

35 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12786030/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12786030