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1.
Biochemical diagnosis of mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders requires caution to avoid misdiagnosis of secondary enzyme defects, and can be improved by the use of conservative diagnostic criteria. Pathogenic mutations causing mitochondrial disorders have now been identified in more than 30 mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genes encoding respiratory chain subunits, ribosomal- and t-RNAs. mtDNA mutations appear to be responsible for most adult patients with mitochondrial disease and approximately a quarter of paediatric patients. A family history suggesting maternal inheritance is the exception rather than the norm for children with mtDNA mutations, many of whom have de novo mutations. Prenatal diagnosis and pre-implantation genetic diagnosis can be offered to some women at risk of transmitting a mtDNA mutation, particularly those at lower recurrence risk. Mutations in more than 30 nuclear genes, including those encoding for respiratory chain subunits and assembly factors, have now been shown to cause mitochondrial disorders, creating difficulties in prioritising which genes should be studied by mutation analysis in individual patients. A number of approaches offer promise to guide the choice of candidate genes, including Blue Native-PAGE immunoblotting and microarray expression analysis.  相似文献   

2.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations are a major cause of human disease. A large number of different molecular defects ultimately compromise oxidative phosphorylation, but it is not clear why the same biochemical defect can cause diverse clinical phenotypes. There is emerging evidence that nuclear genes modulate the phenotype of primary mtDNA disorders. Here, we define an X-chromosomal haplotype that interacts with specific MTND mutations to cause visual failure in the most common mtDNA disease, Leber hereditary optic neuropathy. This effect is independent of the mtDNA genetic background and explains the variable penetrance and sex bias that characterizes this disorder.  相似文献   

3.
The pathobiochemical pathways determining the wide variability in phenotypic expression of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations are not well understood. Most pathogenic mtDNA mutations induce a general defect in mitochondrial respiration and thereby ATP synthesis. Yet phenotypic expression of the different mtDNA mutations shows large variations that are difficult to reconcile with ATP depletion as sole pathogenic factor, implying that additional mechanisms contribute to the phenotype. Here, we use DNA microarrays to identify changes in nuclear gene expression resulting from the presence of the A3243G diabetogenic mutation and from a depletion of mtDNA (rho0 cells). We find that cells respond mildly to these mitochondrial states with both general and specific changes in nuclear gene expression. This observation indicates that cells can sense the status of mtDNA. A number of genes show divergence in expression in rho0 cells compared to cells with the A3243G mutation, such as genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation. As a common response in A3243G and rho0 cells, mRNA levels for extracellular matrix genes are up-regulated, while the mRNA levels of genes involved in ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation and in ribosomal protein synthesis is down-regulated. This reduced expression is reflected at the level of cytosolic protein synthesis in both A3243G and rho0 cells. Our finding that mitochondrial dysfunction caused by different mutations affects nuclear gene expression in partially distinct ways suggests that multiple pathways link mitochondrial function to nuclear gene expression and contribute to the development of the different phenotypes in mitochondrial disease.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Mitochondrial diseases are a group of rare heterogeneous genetic disorders caused by total or partial mitochondrial dysfunction. They can be caused by mutations in nuclear or mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). MERRF (Myoclonic Epilepsy with Ragged-Red Fibers) syndrome is one of the most common mitochondrial disorders caused by point mutations in mtDNA. It is mainly caused by the m.8344A > G mutation in the tRNALys (UUR) gene of mtDNA (MT-TK gene). This mutation affects the translation of mtDNA encoded proteins; therefore, the assembly of the electron transport chain (ETC) complexes is disrupted, leading to a reduced mitochondrial respiratory function.However, the molecular pathogenesis of MERRF syndrome remains poorly understood due to the lack of appropriate cell models, particularly in those cell types most affected in the disease such as neurons. Patient-specific induced neurons (iNs) are originated from dermal fibroblasts derived from different individuals carrying the particular mutation causing the disease. Therefore, patient-specific iNs can be used as an excellent cell model to elucidate the mechanisms underlying MERRF syndrome. Here we present for the first time the generation of iNs from MERRF dermal fibroblasts by direct reprograming, as well as a series of pathophysiological characterizations which can be used for testing the impact of a specific mtDNA mutation on neurons and screening for drugs that can correct the phenotype.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiencies represent one of the major causes of metabolic disorders that are related to genetic defects in mitochondrial or nuclear DNA. The mitochondrial protein synthesis allows the synthesis of the 13 respiratory chain subunits encoded by mtDNA. Altogether, about 100 different proteins are involved in the translation of the 13 proteins encoded by the mitochondrial genome emphasizing the considerable investment required to maintain mitochondrial genetic system. Mitochondrial protein synthesis deficiency can be caused by mutations in any component of the translation apparatus including tRNA, rRNA and proteins. Mutations in mitochondrial rRNA and tRNAs have been first identified in various forms of mitochondrial disorders. Moreover abnormal translation due to mutation in nuclear genes encoding tRNA-modifying enzymes, ribosomal proteins, aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases, elongation and termination factors and translational activators have been successively described. These deficiencies are characterized by a huge clinical and genetic heterogeneity hampering to establish genotype-phenotype correlations and an easy diagnosis. One can hypothesize that a new technique for gene identification, such as exome sequencing will rapidly allow to expand the list of genes involved in abnormal mitochondrial protein synthesis.  相似文献   

8.
Mitochondrial disorders are by far the most genetically heterogeneous group of diseases, involving two genomes, the 16.6 kb mitochondrial genome and ~ 1500 genes encoded in the nuclear genome. For maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA disorders, a complete molecular diagnosis requires several different methods for the detection and quantification of mtDNA point mutations and large deletions. For mitochondrial disorders caused by autosomal recessive, dominant, and X-linked nuclear genes, the diagnosis has relied on clinical, biochemical, and molecular studies to point to a group of candidate genes followed by stepwise Sanger sequencing of the candidate genes one-by-one. The development of Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) has revolutionized the diagnostic approach. Using massively parallel sequencing (MPS) analysis of the entire mitochondrial genome, mtDNA point mutations and deletions can be detected and quantified in one single step. The NGS approach also allows simultaneous analyses of a group of genes or the whole exome, thus, the mutations in causative gene(s) can be identified in one-step. New approaches make genetic analyses much faster and more efficient. Huge amounts of sequencing data produced by the new technologies brought new challenges to bioinformatics, analytical pipelines, and interpretation of numerous novel variants. This article reviews the clinical utility of next generation sequencing for the molecular diagnoses of complex dual genome mitochondrial disorders.  相似文献   

9.
Mitochondria contain a separate protein-synthesis machinery to produce the polypeptides encoded in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), and many mtDNA disease mutations affect this machinery. In humans, the mitochondrial rRNAs and tRNAs are encoded by mtDNA, whereas all proteins involved in mitochondrial translation are encoded by nuclear genes. Recently, several articles have discussed the identification of pathological mutations in nuclear genes encoding components of this protein-synthesis machinery, suggesting that these types of mutation are a frequent cause of human genetic diseases.  相似文献   

10.
In patients with mitochondrial disease a continuously increasing number of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations and polymorphisms have been identified. Most pathogenic mtDNA mutations are heteroplasmic, resulting in heteroduplexes after PCR amplification of mtDNA. To detect these heteroduplexes, we used the technique of denaturing high performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC). The complete mitochondrial genome was amplified in 13 fragments of 1–2 kb, digested in fragments of 90–600 bp and resolved at their optimal melting temperature. The sensitivity of the DHPLC system was high with a lowest detection of 0.5% for the A8344G mutation. The muscle mtDNA from six patients with mitochondrial disease was screened and three mutations were identified. The first patient with a limb-girdle-type myopathy carried an A3302G substitution in the tRNALeu(UUR) gene (70% heteroplasmy), the second patient with mitochondrial myopathy and cardiomyopathy carried a T3271C mutation in the tRNALeu(UUR) gene (80% heteroplasmy) and the third patient with Leigh syndrome carried a T9176C mutation in the ATPase6 gene (93% heteroplasmy). We conclude that DHPLC analysis is a sensitive and specific method to detect heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations. The entire automatic procedure can be completed within 2 days and can also be applied to exclude mtDNA involvement, providing a basis for subsequent investigation of nuclear genes.  相似文献   

11.
Molecular basis of mitochondrial DNA disease   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Mitochondrial ATP production via oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) is essential for normal function and maintenance of human organ systems. Since OXPHOS biogenesis depends on both nuclear- and mitochondrial-encoded gene products, mutations in both genomes can result in impaired electron transport and ATP synthesis, thus causing tissue dysfunction and, ultimately, human disease. Over 30 mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) point mutations and over 100mtDNA rearrangements have now been identified as etiological factors in human disease. Because of the unique characteristics of mtDNA genetics, genotype/phenotype associations are often complex and disease expression can be influenced by a number of factors, including the presence of nuclear modifying or susceptibility alleles. Accordingly, these mutations result in an extraordinarily broad spectrum of clinical phenotypes ranging from systemic, lethal pediatric disease to late-onset, tissue-specific neurodegenerative disorders. In spite of its complexity, an understanding of the molecular basis of mitochondrial DNA disease will be essential as the first step toward rationale and permanent curative therapy.  相似文献   

12.
The most frequent manifestation of mitochondrial disease in adults is chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) that can present with variable multisystemic involvement. Molecular genetically single mtDNA deletions are identified in more than half of the patients associated with mainly sporadic CPEO. There are also autosomal dominant and recessive forms of CPEO due to mutations in nuclear genes that are important for mtDNA replication resulting in multiple mtDNA deletions. Other common multisystemic disorders are MELAS syndrome and MERRF syndrome due to maternally inherited mtDNA point mutations. Leber??s hereditary optic neuropathy is a frequent mitochondrial disorder without multisystemic involvement, which is also due to mtDNA point mutations. In addition to classical mitochondrial disorders there are patients with mitochondrial disease showing non-characteristic sometimes monosymptomic phenotypes (e.g. myopathy or epilepsy) that are difficult to recognize.  相似文献   

13.
Shanske S  Wong LJ 《Mitochondrion》2004,4(5-6):403-415
In this article, we review the current methodologies used for the molecular diagnosis of mitochondrial DNA defects. Definition of mitochondrial disorders at the molecular level has been difficult because of both clinical and genetic heterogeneity. Direct DNA analysis for common point mutations and large mtDNA deletions is readily performed and can be done routinely. However, a large number of patients who have the clinical manifestations and muscle pathology findings consistent with mitochondrial DNA disorders do not have detectable common mutations. Additional mutation screening methods are required for the detection of rare and previously undescribed mutations in the mitochondrial genome.  相似文献   

14.
Mitochondrial Diseases: Therapeutic Approaches   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Therapy of mitochondrial encephalomyopathies (defined restrictively as defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain) is woefully inadequate, despite great progress in our understanding of the molecular bases of these disorders. In this review, we consider sequentially several different therapeutic approaches. Palliative therapy is dictated by good medical practice and includes anticonvulsant medication, control of endocrine dysfunction, and surgical procedures. Removal of noxious metabolites is centered on combating lactic acidosis, but extends to other metabolites. Attempts to bypass blocks in the respiratory chain by administration of electron acceptors have not been successful, but this may be amenable to genetic engineering. Administration of metabolites and cofactors is the mainstay of real-life therapy and is especially important in disorders due to primary deficiencies of specific compounds, such as carnitine or coenzyme Q10. There is increasing interest in the administration of reactive oxygen species scavengers both in primary mitochondrial diseases and in neurodegenerative diseases directly or indirectly related to mitochondrial dysfunction. Aerobic exercise and physical therapy prevent or correct deconditioning and improve exercise tolerance in patients with mitochondrial myopathies due to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations. Gene therapy is a challenge because of polyplasmy and heteroplasmy, but interesting experimental approaches are being pursued and include, for example, decreasing the ratio of mutant to wild-type mitochondrial genomes (gene shifting), converting mutated mtDNA genes into normal nuclear DNA genes (allotopic expression), importing cognate genes from other species, or correcting mtDNA mutations with specific restriction endonucleases. Germline therapy raises ethical problems but is being considered for prevention of maternal transmission of mtDNA mutations. Preventive therapy through genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis is becoming increasingly important for nuclear DNA-related disorders. Progress in each of these approaches provides some glimmer of hope for the future, although much work remains to be done.  相似文献   

15.
Here, relationships between alterations in tissue-specific content, protein structure, activity, and/or assembly of respiratory complexes III and IV induced by mutations in corresponding genes and various human pathologies are reviewed. Cytochrome bc(1) complex and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiencies have been detected in a heterogeneous group of neuromuscular and non-neuromuscular diseases in childhood and adulthood, presenting a number of clinical phenotypes of variable severity. Such disorders can be caused by mutations located either in mitochondrial genes or in nuclear genes encoding structural subunits of the complexes or corresponding assembly factors/chaperones. Of the defects in mitochondrial DNA genes, mutations in cytochrome b subunit of complex III, and in structural subunits I-III of COX have been described to date. As to defects in nuclear DNA genes, mutations in genes encoding the complexes assembly factors such as the BCS1L protein for complex III; and SURF-1, SCO1, SCO2, and COX10 for complex IV have been identified so far.  相似文献   

16.
To date, more than 100 point mutations and several hundreds of structural rearrangements of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are known too be connected with characteristic neuromuscular and other mitochondrial syndromes varying form those causing death at the neonatal stage to diseases with late ages of onset. The immediate cause of mitochondrial disorders is a defective oxidative phosphorylation. Wide phenotypic variation and the heteroplasmy phenomenon, which some authors include in mutation load, are characteristic of human mitochondrial diseases. As the numbers of cases identified and pedigrees described increase, data on the genotype--phenotype interaction and the structure and frequency of pathogenic and conditionally pathogenic mtDNA mutations in human populations are rapidly accumulated. The data on the genetics and epidemiology of mitochondrial diseases are not only important for differential diagnosis and genetic counseling. Since both neutral and mildly pathogenic mutations of mtDNA are progressively accumulated in maternal phyletic lines, molecular analysis of these mutations permits not only reconstruction of the genealogical tree of modern humans, but also estimation of the role that these mutations play in natural selection.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondria contain a molecular genetic system to express the 13 protein components of the electron transport system encoded in the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA). Defects in the function of this system result in some diaseases, many of which are multisystem disorders, prominently involving highly aerobic, postmitotic tissues. These defects can be caused by large-scale rearrangements of mtDNA, by point mutations, or by nuclear gene mutations resulting in abnormalities in mtDNA. Although any of these mutations would be expected to produce a similar clinical phenotype by compromising oxidative phosphorylation, the surprising and puzzling result is that different clinical phenotypes are generally associated with specific mtDNA mutations. Moreover, the same mutation can produce a distinct clinical phenotype in different individuals or pedigrees. MtDNA rearrangements are also found in aged individuals, but at a subclinical level, suggesting that normal and pathological processes can differ by the effect of genetic or environmental factors on the error rate of mtDNA replication.  相似文献   

18.
Mitochondrial disease was a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of diseases, thus the diagnosis was very difficult to clinicians. Our objective was to analyze clinical and genetic characteristics of children with mitochondrial disease in China. We tested 141 candidate patients who have been suspected of mitochondrial disorders by using targeted next-generation sequencing(NGS), and summarized the clinical and genetic data of gene confirmed cases from Neurology Department, Beijing Children's Hospital, Capital Medical University from October 2012 to January 2015. In our study, 40 cases of gene confirmed mitochondrial disease including eight kinds of mitochondrial disease, among which Leigh syndrome was identified to be the most common type, followed by mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes(MELAS). The age-of-onset varies among mitochondrial disease, but early onset was common. All of 40 cases were gene confirmed, among which 25 cases(62.5%)with mitochondrial DNA(mtDNA) mutation, and 15 cases(37.5%) with nuclear DNA(nDNA) mutation. M.3243AG(n=7)accounts for a large proportion of mtDNA mutation. The nDNA mutations include SURF1(n=7),PDHA1(n=2),and NDUFV1,NDUFAF6, SUCLA2, SUCLG1, RRM2 B, and C12orf65, respectively.  相似文献   

19.
To date, more than 100 point mutations and several hundreds of structural rearrangements of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are known too be connected with characteristic neuromuscular and other mitochondrial syndromes varying form those causing death at the neonatal stage to diseases with late ages of onset. The immediate cause of mitochondrial disorders is a defective oxidative phosphorylation. Wide phenotypic variation and the heteroplasmy phenomenon, which some authors include in mutation load, are characteristic of human mitochondrial diseases. As the numbers of cases identified and pedigrees described increase, data on the genotype–phenotype interaction and the structure and frequency of pathogenic and conditionally pathogenic mtDNA mutations in human populations are rapidly accumulated. The data on the genetics and epidemiology of mitochondrial diseases are not only important for differential diagnosis and genetic counseling. Since both neutral and mildly pathogenic mutations of mtDNA are progressively accumulated in maternal phyletic lines, molecular analysis of these mutations permits not only reconstruction of the genealogical tree of modern humans, but also estimation of the role that these mutations play in natural selection.  相似文献   

20.
The small, maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has turned out to be a hotbed of pathogenic mutations: 15 years into the era of ‘mitochondrial medicine’, over 150 pathogenic point mutations and countless rearrangements have been associated with a variety of multisystemic or tissue-specific human diseases. MtDNA-related disorders can be divided into two major groups: those due to mutations in genes affecting mitochondrial protein synthesis in toto and those due to mutations in specific protein-coding genes. Here we review the mitochondrial genetics and the clinical features of the mtDNA-related diseases.  相似文献   

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