The muscle mitochondria of a patient with Kearns-Sayre/chronic external ophthalmoplegia plus syndrome were found to be completely deficient in respiratory complex I activity and partially deficient in complex IV and V activities. Treatment of the patient with coenzyme Q10 and succinate resulted in clinical improvement of respiratory function, consistent with the respiratory deficiencies. Restriction enzyme analysis of the muscle mtDNA revealed a 4.9-kilobase deletion in 50% of the mtDNA molecules. Polymerase chain reaction analysis demonstrated that the deletion was present in the patient's muscle but not in her lymphocytes or platelets. Furthermore, the deletion was not present in the muscle or platelets of two sisters. Hence, the mutation probably occurred in the patient's somatic cells. Direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction-amplified DNA revealed a 4977-base-pair deletion removing four genes for subunits ofcomplex I, one gene for complex IV, two genes for complex V, and five genes for tRNAs, which paralleled the respiratory enzymes affected in the disease. A 13-base-pair direct repeat was observed upstream from both breakpoints. Relative to the direction of heavy-strand replication, the first repeat was retained and the second repeat was deleted, suggesting a slip-replication mechanism. Sequence analysis of the human mtDNA revealed many direct repeats of 10 base pairs or greater, indicating that this mechanism could account for other reported deletions. We postulate that the prevalence of direct repeats in the mtDNA is a consequence of the guanine-cytosine bias of the heavy and light strands.
A number of human diseases have been attributed to defects in oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) resulting from mutations in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). One such disease is Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), a neurodegenerative disease of young adults that results in blindness due to atrophy of the optic nerve. The etiology of LHON is genetically heterogeneous and in some cases multifactorial. Eleven mtDNA mutations have been associated with LHON, all of which are missense mutations in the subunit genes for the subunits of the electron transport chain complexes I, III, and IV. Molecular, biochemical, and population genetic studies have categorized these mutations as high risk (class I), low risk (class II), or intermediate risk (class I/II). Class I mutations appear to be primary genetic causes of LHON, while class II mutations are frequently found associated with class I genotypes and may serve as exacerbating genetic factors. Different LHON pedigrees can harbor different combinations of class I, II, or I/II mtDNA mutations, as shown by the complete sequence analysis of the mtDNAs of four LHON probands. The various mtDNA genotypes included an isolated class I mutation, combined class I+II mutations, and combined class I/II+II mutations. The occurrence of such genotypes supports the hypothesis that LHON may result from the additive effects of various genetic and environmental insults to OXPHOS, each of which increases the probability of blindness.
A child died at 4 months of age of a lethal infantile mitochondrial disease associated with cardiomyopathy. Detailed pathologic evaluation of this patient revealed abnormalities in the striated muscle, smooth muscle, heart, and liver, but not the central nervous system. Biochemical analysis revealed a combined complex I and IV deficiency in skeletal muscle, heart, and liver, but not in kidney and brain. Analysis of mitochondrial translation products and mitochondrial DNA failed to detect any abnormality. Parallel studies on both parents were uniformly normal. These data support the hypothesis that this disease was the result of a nuclear DNA mutation in a developmental stage-specific and tissue-specific oxidative phosphorylation-gene.
Four new missense mutations have been identified through restriction analysis and sequencing of the mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNA) from Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) patients who lacked the previously identified 11778 mutation. Each altered a conserved amino acid and correlated with the LHON phenotype in population and phylogenetic analyses. The nucleotide pair (np) 13708 mutation (G to A, ND5 gene) changed an alanine to a threonine and was found in 6/25 (24%) of non-11778 LHON pedigrees and in 5.0% of controls, the np 15257 mutation (G to A, cytochrome b gene) changed an aspartate to an asparagine and was found in 4 of the 13708-positive pedigrees and 0.3% of controls, the np 15812 mutation (G to A, cytochrome b gene) changed a valine to a methionine and was detected in two of the 15257-positive pedigrees and 0.1% of controls and the np 5244 mutation (G to A, ND2 gene) changed a glycine to a serine and was found in one of the 15812-positive patients and none of 2103 controls. The 15257 mutation altered a highly conserved amino acid in an extramembrane domain of cytochrome b that is associated with the ligation of the low potential b566 heme and the 5244 mutation altered a strongly evolutionarily conserved region of the ND2 polypeptide. The 13708 and 15812 mutations changed moderately conserved amino acids. Haplotype and phylogenetic analysis of the four np 15257 mtDNAs revealed that all harbored the same rare Caucasian haplotype and that the np 13708, np 15257, np 15812 and np 5244 mutations were added sequentially along this mtDNA lineage. Since the percentage of sighted controls decreases as these mutations accumulate, it appears that they interact synergistically, each increasing the probability of blindness. The involvement of both mitochondrial complex I (np 5244, 11778, 13708) and complex III (np 15257, 15812) mutations in LHON indicates that the clinical manifestations of this disease are the product of an overall decrease in mitochondrial energy production rather than a defect in a specific mitochondrial enzyme.
The clinical manifestations of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations depend on a variety of factors including ratios of normal to abnormal mtDNA and tissue-specific differences in ATP production by oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). In order to investigate the effects of OXPHOS defects on renal tubule function, we characterized sodium-coupled transport processes in six individuals with OXPHOS diseases. Pathogenic mtDNA mutations were identified in five of these individuals. Sodium coupled transport processes were evaluated by determining fractional excretions of amino acids, glucose, lactate, urate, and phosphate in patients and controls. Four of the six individuals had high fractional excretions of neutral amino acids, indicating abnormal renal tubule reabsorbtion of these amino acids. Abnormalities in fractional excretions of lactate, glucose, urate, and phosphate were less pronounced. These results demonstrate that sodium-coupled transport processes in the kidney are sensitive to OXPHOS impairment. When abnormalities in these processes are encountered, an OXPHOS disease should be included in the differential diagnosis.
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