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Query: EC:1.9.3.1 (
cytochrome oxidase
)
8,822
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three children displaying hypotonia, cardiac involvement and defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes are reported. The first case showed severe neonatal hypotonia, failure to thrive, hepatomegaly, dilation of the right cardiac cavities, profound lactic acidosis and amino aciduria. The boy died at the age of 7 weeks. In the second case hypotonia, severe
cardiomyopathy
, cyclic neutropenia, lactic acidosis and 3-methylglutaconic aciduria occurred. The boy died at the age of 27 months. The third case presented at the age of 16 months as an acute hypokinetic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with transient hypotonia and mild lactic acidosis. Spontaneous clinical remission occurred. In all cases muscle biopsy was performed. Morphological studies failed to show ragged-red fibers but there was lipid storage myopathy and decreased cytochrome c oxidase activity. Biochemical studies confirmed the cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in muscle in all cases. It was associated with complex I III deficiency in case 1 and with severe deficits of all respiratory chain complexes in case 2. Post-mortem studies in case 1 indicated that
complex IV
was reduced in the liver but not in the heart and quantitative analysis of mtDNA revealed a depletion in muscle. Cases 1 and 2 shared some clinical features with fatal infantile myopathy associated with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency, while case 3 displayed a very unusual clinical presentation. The histochemical enzyme reaction of cytochrome c oxidase is useful for the diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy because ragged-red fibers may be lacking. Finally, biochemical measurement of the different mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes is required because multiple defects are frequent and occasionally related to mtDNA depletion.
...
PMID:Defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes in three pediatric cases with hypotonia and cardiac involvement. 132 Jun 61
The effect of alcohol on oxidative phosphorylation, activity of
cytochrome oxidase
and the content of cytochromes in mitochondria of the heart muscle was studied in rabbits after 14- and 21-day subcutaneous administration of 20% alcohol solution. Alcohol was found to exert an inhibitory effect on oxygen consumption and on the rate of energy production in mitochondria of the heart muscle, to decrease the specific activity of
cytochrome oxidase
and to increase the cytochrome content in the mitochondria. The authors classify these metabolic derangements under the concept of alcoholic mitochondrial
cardiomyopathy
and discuss broader aspects of mitochondrial diseases in medicine.
...
PMID:[Alcoholic mitochondrial cardiomyopathy]. 133 10
Fourteen new cases of
cytochrome oxidase
(
COX
)-associated Leigh syndrome (LS) are combined with 20 reported cases to describe the clinical, laboratory, and radiological features of this devastating metabolic condition. Three clinical stages are identified. Most patients have normal neurological development during the first 8-12 months (stage I). Somatic complaints are common, including chronic diarrhea, recurrent vomiting, anorexia, and decelerating body and head growth. The second stage evolves during late infancy and early childhood when motor regression becomes evident. Eye signs, altered breathing patterns, pyramidal, extrapyramidal, and cerebellar signs emerge and sudden clinical deterioration occurs during intercurrent infectious or metabolic stress. The last stage may extend from 2 to 10 years and is manifested by extreme hypotonia, swallowing difficulties and undernutrition. Feeding assistance is necessary and seizures may occur. The CSF lactate concentration is consistently elevated and MRI abnormalities are seen in the subcortical structures.
COX
deficiency affects most tissues, but is not always generalized. For example, 3 patients with a
cardiomyopathy
had normal
COX
activity in cultured skin fibroblasts. Nearly normal amounts of cross-reacting material are present by ELISA and immunoblot analyses. Parental consanguinity has been found in several families, the hereditary pattern is recessive and males are affected more commonly (2:1). The biomolecular abnormality causing
COX
deficiency in LS is unknown, but the available evidence implicates a nuclear-encoded protein that affects the structure or the stability of the holoenzyme complex.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase-associated Leigh syndrome: phenotypic features and pathogenetic speculations. 165 84
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
Different point mutations of the mitochondrial genome, which all affect the ability of mitochondria to translate their own genes and lead to partial defects of mtDNA-dependent respiratory complexes, are related to distinct clinical mitochondrial disorders. A new maternally inherited disorder, characterised by a combination of adult-onset myopathy and
cardiomyopathy
, with no clinical involvement of the nervous system, was found in members of a single large pedigree. A heteroplasmic new mutation was identified in the mtDNA gene specifying tRNA(Leu)(UUR). This mutation segregated specifically with the disorder, and there were significant correlations between the proportion of the mtDNA that was of the mutant form and the activities (normalised for citrate synthase activity) of the two mtDNA-dependent respiratory enzymes (complex I, r = -0.71, p less than 0.005:
complex IV
r = -0.77, p less than 0.005) and the maximum oxygen consumption (r = -0.82, p less than 0.005), a physiological index of aerobic metabolism. These findings strongly suggest that the tRNA(Leu)(UUR) mutation is the genetic cause of this disorder, and that lesions of mtDNA should be considered in the differential diagnosis of the hereditary cardiomyopathies.
...
PMID:Maternally inherited myopathy and cardiomyopathy: association with mutation in mitochondrial DNA tRNA(Leu)(UUR). 167 65
Mitochondrial disorder is an inborn error of metabolism affecting the cellular respiratory chain. Defective energy production leads to a wide variety of clinical manifestations (ataxia, epilepsy, dementia, myopathy, polyneuropathy, retinal pigment anomalies, and
cardiomyopathy
with conduction anomalies). Hearing loss is a regular feature and is often the first clinical symptom. Audiologic data from 26 members of a family in three generations is presented. One of these patients was examined for the biochemical error. Respiratory study of muscle biopsy revealed a mild defect in the NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase step of the oxidative phosphorylation (complex I). The content of
cytochrome aa3
(
complex IV
) was also reduced. Adult onset sensorineural hearing loss starting in the high frequency region progresses with a fairly constant speed in this family. A cochlear type of hearing loss is found in the less pronounced cases. Advanced cases present features of retrocochlear affection with decreasing speech recognition, elevated acoustic reflex thresholds, and increased ABR latency with derangement of potentials. Caloric sensitivity was unaffected.
...
PMID:Audiologic findings in a family with mitochondrial disorder. 180 40
During a 4-year period 1984 to 1988, 20 children referred with manifestations of central nervous system or neuromuscular disease combined with hyperlactatemia were found to have a mitochondrial disease. Each diagnosis was based on the results of thorough biochemical and morphologic investigations. The patients were separated into one series with mainly encephalopathy (n = 14) and another with mainly myopathy (n = 6). The patients with encephalopathy had the following syndromes: Kearns-Sayre (n = 2), MERRF (myoclonus epilepsy and ragged red fibers; n = 2), MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes; n = 3), Alpers (n = 3), Leigh (n = 1), and other variants (n = 3). In patients with myopathy, three had hypertrophic nonobstructive
cardiomyopathy
. Ultrastructural abnormalities of mitochondria were the most common morphologic changes in the muscle biopsies. Complex I deficiency was most common in the patients with encephalopathy. All of the patients with myopathy had
complex IV
deficiency. Mutations of mitochondrial DNA were found in six patients with encephalopathy. We conclude that identification of defects at the DNA level and determination of the phenotypic expression with clinical, morphologic, and biochemical methods are fundamental for future rational classification of mitochondrial disorders.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathies in childhood. II. Clinical manifestations and syndromes. 186 Dec 10
Biochemical results concerning 64 patients suspected of mitochondrial myopathies are presented. Four clinical groups were studied including 21 encephalomyopathies, 42 ocular myopathies, 8 isolated myopathies and 3 cardiomyopathies. In 26 cases, the coexistence of a normal mitochondrial DNA and a mutated mitochondrial DNA (heteroplasmy) was found (19 simple deletions, 4 multiple deletions and 3 punctual mutations) and all cases presented with ocular disorders (excepted 2 cases with MERRF). Furthermore, 1 complex I deficiency (1 ocular myopathy), 1
complex IV
deficiency (1 adult encephalomyopathy type Leigh), 3 complexes I + IV deficiencies (2 cases with a
cardiomyopathy
and 1 familial MELAS) and 2 pyruvate (1 adult from of Leigh's encephalomyopathy) dehydrogenase deficiencies (clinically and genetically different) did not show evidence of mitochondrial DNA mutation.
...
PMID:[Mitochondrial function and mitochondrial DNA in a series of 64 patients suspected of having mitochondrial myopathy]. 196 51
Two siblings with infantile lactic acidosis and mitochondrial myopathy are described. The first child, a girl, died at 5 months of age from severe lactic acidosis after about 3 weeks of progressive muscular hypotonia. The younger brother had congenital lactic acidosis but no other symptoms until 6 months of age when progressive muscle weakness appeared. Treatment with dichloroacetate lowered the serum lactic acid level but did not affect his clinical condition. At 13 months of age,
cardiomyopathy
was diagnosed and he died at the age of 29 months of circulatory failure. Both children had mitochondrial myopathy. Postmortem examination of the boy revealed marked morphologic changes of the mitochondria in both skeletal muscle and the myocardium; biochemical investigation of skeletal muscle mitochondria demonstrated deficiencies in both complex I (NADH ferricyanide reductase) and
complex IV
(cytochrome c oxidase). The disease in these siblings differs in several respects from previously reported patients with mitochondrial myopathy and cytochrome c oxidase deficiency.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy and cardiomyopathy in siblings. 274 28
The acute and prolonged effects of alcohol and smoking on the oxidative and energy processes of cardiac muscle in experimental animals were studied at the subcellular level. The acute effect of alcohol manifested itself by decreasing mitochondrial respiration, compensated by increased glycolytic activity of the myocardium so that myocardial energy phosphate concentration remained unchanged. The prolonged effect of alcohol (for a period of 14 days) resulted in a decrease in oxidative processes as well as in glycolytic activity with a subsequent decline in myocardial ATP and CP levels. Smoking led to a significant decrease in oxidative and total bioenergetic processes of cardiac muscle mitochondria both after acute and prolonged smoking. This metabolic disorder is localized in the terminal segment of the respiratory chain of the mitochondria at the level of
cytochrome oxidase
. The authors conclude that the above-mentioned disorders may play a role in the development of heart failure on the basis of alcoholic or smoke
cardiomyopathy
.
...
PMID:Metabolic disorders of cardiac muscle in alcoholic and smoke cardiomyopathy. 280 6
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