Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.6.5.3 (complex I)
8,901 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To investigate ophthalmologic manifestations in children with definitive oxidative phosphorylation disorders, a retrospective review was conducted of clinical and laboratory records of all such pediatric patients (n = 103) diagnosed and treated at one center between 1983 and 2006. All were residents of Victoria, Australia. Nystagmus or roving eye movements were the most common ophthalmologic manifestations as a presenting symptom of disease (13/20) and were the sole manifestation at presentation in 10/13 patients. Divergent strabismus was a presenting symptom in 5/20 patients and was the sole manifestation at presentation in 3/20 patients. Abnormal eye movements were noted in 6 patients and strabismus was noted in 4 patients with Leigh's or Leigh-like disease; in 9 of these 10 patients, Leigh's disease was the result of complex I deficiency. Altogether, ophthalmologic manifestations were noted at presentation in 12/35 patients with complex I deficiency. External ophthalmoplegia in conjunction with ptosis was the presenting symptom in 3/20 patients, all with Kearns-Sayers syndrome. Patients suspected of having oxidative phosphorylation disorders should be referred for ophthalmologic examination. Prospective studies are needed for a comprehensive elucidation of the ophthalmologic findings in these disorders.
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PMID:Ophthalmologic presentation of oxidative phosphorylation diseases of childhood. 1848 20

With over 1,000 nuclear genes that could potentially cause a mitochondrial disorder, the current diagnostic approach requires targeted molecular analysis, guided by a combination of clinical and biochemical features. However, the expanding molecular and clinical spectrum means that this approach does not always yield a result. Here we report the unusual clinical presentation of "Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia (PEO) plus" Leigh syndrome in three children from a consanguineous family where exome sequencing identified mutations in NDUFS8. NDUFS8 is a nuclear-encoded structural core protein of complex I, and mutations are expected to cause infantile onset and severe disease. Our patients had a later onset, milder and a clinically distinct phenotype, and this gene would not normally be considered in this context. Being untargeted to specific genes, whole exome analysis has the potential to re-write the phenotype and reveal an unexpected molecular aetiology, as illustrated by this family.
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PMID:NDUFS8-related Complex I Deficiency Extends Phenotype from "PEO Plus" to Leigh Syndrome. 2343 Jul 95