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Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:1.3.5.1 (
succinate dehydrogenase
)
8,177
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have studied cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficient muscle fibre segments in 6 patients with
mitochondrial myopathy
and deletions of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). The distribution of transcripts of normal and mutated mtDNA in skeletal muscle sections was studied by in situ hybridization. The results were compared with the enzyme histochemical activity of COX and the immunohistochemical distribution of mtDNA encoded and nuclear DNA encoded subunits of COX. In all cases a proportion of the muscle fibres (less than 1-30% of the fibres in cross-sections) had low COX activity and high activity of
succinate dehydrogenase
(COX deficient muscle fibres). Transcripts of normal and deleted mtDNA showed the same distribution within the tissue as the corresponding mtDNA, indicating that the deleted mtDNA is transcribed. The COX deficient muscle fibres showed accumulation of transcripts of deleted mtDNA, which had a similar distribution as the accumulated mitochondria within these fibres. With few exceptions, there was a low level of transcripts of normal mtDNA in these COX deficient fibres. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed low levels of immunoreactive material using antiserum to the mtDNA encoded subunits II/III as well as the nuclear DNA encoded subunit IV of COX in all COX deficient muscle fibres. The fraction of deleted mtDNA in muscle ranged from 43 to 87%. There was no correlation between the proportion of COX deficient muscle fibres and the fraction of deleted mtDNA. In 2 cases the deletion did not involve any COX gene. One of these cases had 87% deleted mtDNA but less than 1% COX deficient muscle fibres.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mitochondrial DNA deletions and cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in muscle fibres. 132 95
Mitochondrial myopathies are morphologically characterized by ragged-red fibres (RRF). Serial cross-section revealed that the ragged-red appearance was only focal. This is in agreement with a partial cytochrome c oxidase (COX) deficiency in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO). Since most of these patients show deletions of the mitochondrial genome single fibre analyses were performed determining COX and
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) in serial muscle sections from two patients with CPEO. High
SDH
activity was demonstrated in RRF; in contrast COX activity was lower in RRF in a patient, possibly representing a focal assembly of mitochondria with deletions in their genomes. The variation of enzyme activities along the muscle fibre was especially high in RRF. This study presents the first quantitative evidence that enzyme activities vary considerably along fibres in muscle from patients with a
mitochondrial myopathy
.
...
PMID:Enzyme activity analyses along ragged-red and normal single muscle fibres. 133 Sep 95
Patients with a hereditary
mitochondrial myopathy
with
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) deficiency and abnormal lactacidosis during physical exercise have a low work capacity when exercising for about 10-15 min. Their maximum voluntary muscular strength is fairly normal. The relationship between the time (t) and a constant workload (N) that a healthy subject can maximally sustain can be expressed as: log t = beta + alpha log N. For normal subjects the constant alpha is approximately -5 and the constant beta has a large interindividual variation. Of four myopathy patients alpha was determined from two or three maximum bicycle exercise tests of different duration (including ramp- and steady-state tests using a new application of the method of adding submaximal loads to the final maximum workload). The value of alpha varied between -1.0 and -1.81 and beta had low values, both significantly different from those of healthy subjects. The alpha values explain the divergent results that may be obtained with different types of exercise tests in some of these patients, i.e. a normal or moderately reduced capacity in exercise tests of short duration (for example a short Tornvall or a ramp type of test) and a very low exercise capacity in tests of longer duration (for example a steady state type of test with workloads chosen to allow at least two loads). The low absolute value of alpha may be related to the abnormally increased anaerobic metabolism of these patients during exercise, caused by the
SDH
deficiency.
...
PMID:Dependence of maximum performance time on work intensity in patients with a hereditary myopathy with succinate dehydrogenase deficiency. 139 48
The strongly
succinate dehydrogenase
-reactive blood vessels (SSV) are shown to have increased numbers of enlarged mitochondria in smooth muscle cells of the vessel wall on electron microscopy. They are seen in biopsied skeletal muscles from patients with
mitochondrial myopathy
, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) at high frequency. The present study was done to examine the incidence of SSV in biopsied muscles from various neuromuscular diseases. Among 107 patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathies (MEM) including 50 with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO), 7 with myoclonus epilepsy with ragged-red fibers (MERRF), and 50 with MELAS, SSV were seen in nearly a half of the patients, and comprised approximately 24% of small arteries. On the other hand, SSV in 100 patients with various neuromuscular diseases other than MEM were exceptional, and only one of 8 patients with myotonic dystrophy had SSV. These findings suggest that the SSV are induced by functional abnormality of mitochondria in smooth muscle cells, and that an identification of the SSV is an additional crucial evidence to make a pathological diagnosis of MEM.
...
PMID:[Strongly succinate dehydrogenase-reactive blood vessels (SSV) in various neuromuscular diseases]. 142 48
Vascular involvement in biopsied muscle specimens from 11 patients with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) with ragged-red fibers (RRF) was studied. Almost none of 69 intramuscular arteries examined were strongly stained with
succinate dehydrogenase
(
SDH
) except one patient who had 2 SSV (strongly
SDH
-reactive blood vessels) in his muscle biopsy. Although RRF and focal cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) deficiency in muscle fibers were the common histochemical changes in muscle biopsy specimens from CPEO patients, all mitochondria in both endothelial and smooth muscle cells of the arteries had normal morphology except for the two SSV and all mitochondria in the blood vessels had normal CCO activity by electron cytochemistry. The findings obtained from the present study were quite different from those in
mitochondrial myopathy
, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS), and myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged-red fibers (MERRF) in which the striking vascular involvement with SSV is the most common and major abnormality in muscle biopsy specimens. To study vascular involvement in mitochondrial encephalomyopathies is the one of very important clues to understand the pathophysiology of phenotypic expressions in mitochondrial encephalomyopathies.
...
PMID:[Vascular pathology in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia with ragged-red fibers]. 161 73
A 5-month-old boy died of progressive heart failure that started at the age of 3 months. Autopsy revealed a mitochondrial cardiomyopathy and a
mitochondrial myopathy
of the limb muscle and diaphragm. Cytochemically random defects of cytochrome c oxidase were visualized by light and electron microscopy in the diaphragm and especially the heart muscle, the limb muscle showing a diffuse attenuation whereas the liver and kidneys reacted normally. The activities of NADH-dehydrogenase (complex I) and cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) were severely diminished (20% residual activity of controls) in the skeletal and heart muscle. In the heart, succinate cytochrome c reductase (
complex II
/III) was additionally decreased to the same degree. Loss of cytochrome c oxidase activity was based on a reduction of both mitochondrial and nuclear derived subunits in the heart and diaphragm as revealed by immunohistochemical analysis, whereas the limb muscle showed a normal immunoreactive protein content. The results illustrate heterogeneous tissue expression of respiratory chain enzyme defects and demonstrate that a cardiomyopathy may be the leading presentation of a mitochondrial disorder in early infancy.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile mitochondrial cardiomyopathy and myopathy with heterogeneous tissue expression of combined respiratory chain deficiencies. 165 34
Intramuscular blood vessels were examined with
succinate dehydrogenase
stain in skeletal muscle biopsy specimens from 6 patients with
mitochondrial myopathy
, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS). Almost all arteries had large granular deposits with high
succinate dehydrogenase
activity in their walls. Electron microscopic examination of serial frozen sections of these biopsies showed that the smooth muscle cells of the strongly
succinate dehydrogenase
-reactive blood vessels contained markedly proliferated mitochondria, characteristic of patients with MELAS. The presence of strongly
succinate dehydrogenase
-reactive blood vessels in muscle biopsy specimens provides an important clue toward understanding the underlying pathogenetic mechanism in patients with MELAS as well as another approach to the diagnosis of this disorder.
...
PMID:Strongly succinate dehydrogenase-reactive blood vessels in muscles from patients with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes. 189 63
Single fiber analyses were performed in normal and diseased muscle by means of a high-resolution microphotometric method. We investigated the activity distribution of a mitochondrial marker enzyme,
succinate dehydrogenase
, within single muscle fibers. We differentiated between the central and the subsarcolemmal region. Both normal muscle fibers, and ragged-red fibers from patients with a
mitochondrial myopathy
showed significantly higher
succinate dehydrogenase
activities in the subsarcolemmal region. Since the fibers' supply of oxygen is accomplished by diffusion from capillaries located close to the sarcoplasmic membrane our results are of functional importance.
...
PMID:Quantitative succinate dehydrogenase analysis in normal and ragged-red muscle fibers. 191 79
We studied a large family with a dominantly inherited
mitochondrial myopathy
characterized by progressive external ophthalmoplegia, dysphagia, cataract, lactic acidosis, exercise intolerance, and early death. Morphologic studies of muscle biopsies suggested mitochondrial heteroplasmy and revealed ragged-red fibers and decreased histochemical reactions for cytochrome c oxidase and
succinate dehydrogenase
. Biochemistry showed a partial defect of cytochrome c oxidase and a mild generalized reduction of other mitochondrial enzymes requiring mitochondrial DNA-encoded subunits. Southern blot analysis and PCR amplification showed mitochondrial DNA deletions in muscle of all affected members, but not in lymphocytes or fibroblasts, suggesting a tissue-specific distribution. Deletions were multiple and seemed to increase with time and to correlate with the severity of the disease.
...
PMID:Dominantly inherited mitochondrial myopathy with multiple deletions of mitochondrial DNA: clinical, morphologic, and biochemical studies. 206 33
An unusual hereditary myopathy with paroxysmal myoglobinuria has been described previously. We have studied muscle biopsy specimens taken before and after exercise to exhaustion (24 min at 20-25 W) in a young woman with this condition. Marked glycogenolysis with lactate production and marked phosphagen breakdown (ATP + CP) were observed after exercise, and almost all type I fibres were found to be depleted of glycogen. Succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity was low, while the activities of 3-OH-acyl-CoA-dehydrogenase, phosphofructokinase, phosphorylase and lactate dehydrogenase were normal. On electron microscopy, the mitochondria showed abnormalities typical of
mitochondrial myopathy
. The findings in our patient suggest a limitation of mitochondrial function, probably related to SDH in the tricarboxylic acid cycle and
complex II
in the electron transport chain. This may explain the inability of ATP regeneration to keep pace with ATP utilization during exercise. Other metabolic defects may coexist.
...
PMID:Low succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) activity in a patient with a hereditary myopathy with paroxysmal myoglobinuria. 238 36
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