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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
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11,717
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A 1-month-old boy was admitted because of failure to thrive. He was floppy and had bilateral
ptosis
, diminished reflexes, and poor suck. He had aspiration pneumonia, developed seizures, and died at age 3 1/2 months. Laboratory data showed lactic acidosis, proteinuria, glycosuria and generalized aminoaciduria. He was an only child, and family history was negative. Muscle biopsy showed large clumps of granules positive with oxidative enzyme stains and increased lipid droplets. Ultrastructural studies showed large aggregates of mitochondria, many of which were greatly enlarged and contained disoriented or concentric whorls of cristae and paracrystalline inclusions. Cytochrome c oxidase was absent in fresh frozen sections by histochemical staining. By biochemical assay, cytochrome c oxidase (
cytochrome aa3
) was 6% of normal in muscle biopsy and undetectable in autopsy muscle; spectra and content of cytochromes showed lack of
cytochrome aa3
, decreased cytochrome b and normal cytochrome cc1. In kidney, cytochrome-c-oxidase activity was 38% of normal and spectra showed decreased cytochromes aa3 and b. The association of fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy, lactic acidosis and renal dysfunction was previously reported by Van Biervliet et al and appears to be a distinct nosologic entity, one of the few biochemically defined mitochondrial myopathies.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy and renal dysfunction due to cytochrome-c-oxidase deficiency. 625 6
The mode of inheritance of Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) and chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) have not yet been established, since most cases are sporadic. We studied skeletal muscle pathology and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in a sporadic KSS patient (proband) and examined mitochondrial function of the muscle in his asymptomatic family members. The proband was a 56-year-old male with bilateral
ptosis
, external ophthalmoplegia, retinal degeneration and cardiac conduction disturbance. Biopsied deltoid muscle showed 9.7% of ragged red fibers without
cytochrome oxidase
(
COX
) activity and abnormal mitochondria on electron microscopy. Analysis of muscle mtDNA revealed a 4,977 bp deletion between nt. 8,483 and 13,459. None of the family members had symptoms similar to those of the proband. However, an aerobic exercise test of 15W for 15 minutes with an ergometer induced a marked increase in serum lactate levels in the proband's mother. Histology of her biopsied deltoid muscle showed 0.3% of ragged red fibers without
COX
activity and morphologically abnormal mitochondria. These findings indicate that the abnormal mitochondria of the proband were transmitted from his asymptomatic mother. This also suggests that some of the sporadic KSS/CPEO cases are inherited one.
...
PMID:[A case of Kearns-Sayre syndrome whose asymptomatic mother had abnormal mitochondria in skeletal muscle]. 778 Dec 38
The protean manifestations of a novel maternally inherited point mutation of the mitochondrial genome are reported. The proband showed isolated, spastic paraparesis. A brother, who had suffered from a multisystem progressive disorder, ultimately died of cardiomyopathy. Another brother is healthy. The proband's mother showed truncal ataxia, dysarthria, severe hearing loss, mental regression,
ptosis
, ophthalmoparesis, distal cyclones, and diabetes mellitus. A muscle biopsy performed in the proband failed to show the morphological abnormalities typical of mitochondrial disorders; the activities of respiratory chain complexes were normal. However, complex I and IV activities were low in the muscle homogenate of the affected mother and brother. Sequence analysis of mtDNA showed a heteroplasmic mutation of the tRNA(Ile) gene (G4284A). The mutation load was approximately 55%, 80%, and 90% in the muscle mtDNA of the proband, his mother, and his affected brother, respectively. Mutation was undetected in the healthy brother, as well as in 100 control samples. Several cybrid clones containing homoplasmic mutant mtDNA from the proband showed significant reductions of
complex IV
activity and maximum oxygen consumption rate, compared with homoplasmic wild-type clones derived from the same subject.
...
PMID:Novel heteroplasmic mtDNA mutation in a family with heterogeneous clinical presentations. 1178 91
We report on 2 adult patients presenting with choreic movements as the main clinical feature of mitochondrial cytopathy. One patient exhibited a sensory neuronopathy and ophthalmoplegia. The other had
ptosis
, a proximal myopathy, and a sensory neuropathy. The diagnosis of mitochondrial cytopathy was established by the presence of ragged red fibers, cytochrome C oxydase-negative fibers, and a defect of the
complex IV
of the respiratory chain in muscle biopsy. No mutations in mitochondrial DNA were detected. The choreic movements observed in juvenile forms of mitochondrial cytopathy are rarely observed in adults. Although striatal vulnerability is commonly reported in patients with mitochondrial disorders, the mechanism by which the mitochondrial dysfunction leads to chorea is not known.
...
PMID:Adult-onset chorea and mitochondrial cytopathy. 1559 39
We identified a novel G3283A transition in the mitochondrial DNA tRNA(Leu (UUR)) gene in a patient with
ptosis
, ophthalmoparesis and hyporeflexia. Muscle biopsy showed
cytochrome oxidase
positive ragged-red fibers, and defects of complexes I, III and IV of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The mutation was heteroplasmic in muscle of the proband, being absent in her blood. Ragged-red fibers harbored greater levels of mutant genomes than normal fibers. The G3283A mutation affects a strictly conserved base pair in the TPsiC stem of the gene and was not found in controls, thus satisfying the accepted criteria for pathogenicity.
...
PMID:A novel mutation in the mitochondrial DNA tRNA Leu (UUR) gene associated with late-onset ocular myopathy. 1736 46
Leigh syndrome is a subacute necrotising encephalomyopathy proven by post-mortem analysis of brain tissue showing spongiform lesions with vacuolation of the neuropil followed by demyelination, gliosis and capillary proliferation caused by mutations in one of over 75 different genes, including nuclear- and mitochondrial-encoded genes, most of which are associated with mitochondrial respiratory chain function. In this study, we report a patient with suspected Leigh syndrome presenting with seizures,
ptosis
, scoliosis, dystonia, symmetrical putaminal abnormalities and a lactate peak on brain MRS, but showing normal MRC enzymology in muscle and liver, thereby complicating the diagnosis. Whole exome sequencing uncovered compound heterozygous mutations in NADH dehydrogenase (ubiquinone) flavoprotein 1 gene (NDUFV1), c.1162+4A>C (NM_007103.3), resulting in skipping of exon 8, and c.640G>A, causing the amino acid substitution p.Glu214Lys, both of which have previously been reported in a patient with complex I deficiency. Patient fibroblasts showed a significant reduction in NDUFV1 protein expression, decreased complex CI and
complex IV
assembly and consequential reductions in the enzymatic activities of both complexes by 38% and 67%, respectively. The pathogenic effect of these variations was further confirmed by immunoblot analysis of subunits for MRC enzyme complexes in patient muscle, liver and fibroblast where we observed 90%, 60% and 95% reduction in complex CI, respectively. Together these studies highlight the importance of a comprehensive, multipronged approach to the laboratory evaluation of patients with suspected Leigh syndrome.
...
PMID:Whole Exome Sequencing Identifies the Genetic Basis of Late-Onset Leigh Syndrome in a Patient with MRI but Little Biochemical Evidence of a Mitochondrial Disorder. 2734 48
An 11-year-old boy with psychomotor delay, exercise intolerance,
ptosis
and growth delay had a muscle biopsy showing typical mitochondrial alterations (60% of ragged-red fibers and 90% of
cytochrome-c oxidase
-deficient fibers). Next-generation sequencing revealed a novel heteroplasmic mutation (m.15958A>T) in the MTTP gene that encodes tRNA
Pro
. The mutation was not present in the accessible non-muscle tissues of the patient's asymptomatic mother. Mutations in the rarely affected MTTP gene are responsible for different clinical presentations. We report the third early-onset case associated with a mutation in this gene. The severity of myopathy is likely related to the high mutation rate (96%) found in the patient's muscle. The clinical heterogeneity associated with MTTP mutations illustrates the value of the next-generation sequencing in routine diagnosis of mitochondrial diseases.
...
PMID:A new mutation in the mitochondrial tRNA
Pro
gene associated with early-onset neuromuscular phenotype and ragged-red fibers. 2855 55
Leigh syndrome (or subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy) is a rare neurodegenerative disorder characterized by psychomotor retardation or regression, typically occurring in stepwise decrements. Onset is typically between ages 3 and 12 months. Neurological manifestations include hypotonia, spasticity, movement disorders (including chorea), cerebellar ataxia, and peripheral neuropathy, whereas extraneurological manifestations may include hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypertrichosis, anemia, renal tubulopathy, liver involvement,
ptosis
, and muscle weakness. Approximately 50% of affected individuals die by age 3 years, most often as a result of respiratory or cardiac failure. We report a case of 22-month-old female child presenting to us with severe failure to thrive, dysmorphic features, hirsutism, external ophthalmoplegia epilepsy, and neuroregression with characteristic findings of Leigh's syndrome on neuroimaging and her muscle biopsy revealed evidence of mitochondrial respiratory chain defect involving
complex IV
and
SURF1
mutation.
...
PMID:Facial Dysmorphism, Hirsutism, and Failure to Thrive as Manifestation of Leigh Syndrome in a Child with
SURF1
Mutation. 3304 41