Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1762617 (weakness)
37,932 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The mitochondrion is the only extranuclear organelle containing DNA (mtDNA). As such, genetically determined mitochondrial diseases may result from a molecular defect involving the mitochondrial or the nuclear genome. The first is characterized by maternal inheritance and the second by Mendelian inheritance. Ragged-red fibers (RRF) are commonly seen with primary lesions of mtDNA, but this association is not invariant. Conversely, RRF are seldom associated with primary lesions of nuclear DNA. Large-scale rearrangements (deletions and insertions) and point mutations of mtDNA are commonly associated with RRF and lactic acidosis, e.g. Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) (major large-scale rearrangements), Pearson syndrome (large-scale rearrangements), myoclonus epilepsy with RRF (MERRF) (point mutation affecting tRNA(lys) gene), mitochondrial myopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) (two point mutations affecting tRNA(leu)(UUR) gene) and a maternally-inherited myopathy with cardiac involvement (MIMyCa) (point mutation affecting tRNA(leu)(UUR) gene). However, RRF and lactic acidosis are absent in Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) (one point mutation affecting ND4 gene, two point mutations affecting ND1 gene, and one point mutation affecting the apocytochrome b subunit of complex III), and the condition associated with maternally inherited sensory neuropathy (N), ataxia (A), retinitis pigmentosa (RP), developmental delay, dementia, seizures, and limb weakness (NARP) (point mutation affecting ATPase subunit 6 gene). The point mutations in MELAS, MIMyCa, and MERRF, and the large-scale mtDNA rearrangements in KSS and Pearson syndrome have a broader biochemical impact since these molecular defects involve the translational sequence of mitochondrial protein synthesis. The nuclear defects involving mitochondrial function generally are not associated with RRF. The biochemical classification of mitochondrial diseases principally catalogues these nuclear defects. This classification divides mitochondrial diseases into five categories. Primary and secondary deficiencies of carnitine are examples of a substrate transport defect. A lipid storage myopathy is often present. Disturbances of pyruvate or fatty acid metabolism are examples of substrate utilization defects. Only four defects of the Krebs cycle are known: fumarase deficiency, dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase deficiency, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase deficiency, and combined defects of muscle succinate dehydrogenase and aconitase. Luft disease is the singular example of a defect in oxidation-phosphorylation coupling. Defects of respiratory chain function are manifold. Two clinical syndromes predominate, one involving limb weakness, and the other primarily affecting brain function. Leigh syndrome may result from different enzyme defects, most notably pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency, cytochrome c oxidase deficiency, complex I deficiency, and complex V deficiency associated with the recently described NARP point mutation. A new group of mitochondrial diseases has emerged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The expanding clinical spectrum of mitochondrial diseases. 833 7

A family with maternally-transmitted deafness and diabetes mellitus is described. Although the proband clinically exhibited MELAS-like symptoms such as sudden-onset cerebellar ataxia and weakness of the proximal portion of the limbs in addition to deafness and diabetes mellitus, the other three members of the family had only deafness and diabetes mellitus and no neurological manifestations. The analysis of mitochondrial DNA of the two members revealed an A-->G mutation of tRNA(leu(UUR)), a mutation commonly seen in patients with MELAS. According to the clinical histories and endocrinological investigations, the type of the diabetes mellitus in this family was considered to be IDDM, which may be attributed to the dysfunction of mitochondrial of the pancreas islet cells, resulting from the mutation of the mitochondrial DNA.
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PMID:[A family with MELAS whose main manifestations are maternally-transmitted deafness and diabetes mellitus]. 840 88

This man with myoclonus epilepsy and ragged red fibres (MERRF) syndrome due to the tRNA(Lys) A-->G(8344) mutation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) died of bronchopneumonia at 18 years of age. He had progressive clinical symptoms from 6 months of age manifesting as ataxia, myoclonic seizures, and muscle weakness. A post-mortem examination revealed 91-99% mutated mtDNA in all 32 examined tissue samples, including various organs and different brain regions. The brain appeared without macroscopic changes, but microscopic examination showed degeneration with loss of nerve cells and gliosis affecting the globus pallidus, substantia nigra, red nucleus, dentate nucleus, inferior olivary nucleus, cerebellar cortex, and the spinal cord. Skeletal muscle showed cytochrome c oxidase deficient muscle fibres with proliferation of mitochondria. In addition to pathological changes of muscle and brain there were few morphological changes that could be attributed to his mitochondrial disease. These data support the concept that in patients with the tRNA(Lys) A-->G(8344) mutation who are manifesting disease there are high levels of mutated mtDNA in all tissues, but only some tissues and brain regions are vulnerable.
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PMID:Tissue distribution and disease manifestations of the tRNA(Lys) A-->G(8344) mitochondrial DNA mutation in a case of myoclonus epilepsy and ragged red fibres. 852 9

We report the clinical signs and histological findings in nine patients with mitochondrial ocular myopathies. There were four males and five females. Of age ranging from 47 to 82 years. A more often asymetrical ptosis was in all cases of chronic progressive external ophtalmoplegia (CPEO), but muscle weakness in limbs was not usual. The prognosis in this group was good, but ubidecarenone (150 mg/d) used for two cases, did not improve ophtalmoplegia. The serum creatine kinase was normal in eight of nine cases and electromyography showed myopathic changes in three cases. Histoenzymatic analysis of the muscle biopsy and biochemical studies of mitochondria isolated from the muscle sample demonstrated mitochondrial myopathy associated with partial deficiency of complexes I and/or IV of the electron transfer chain. One of seven patients studied had single deletion by Southern blot analysis, in a heteroplasmic state and another an A-->G transition at position 3243 within the mitochondrial tRNA leu (UUR) gene. Chronic progressive external ophtalmoplegia, without large deletion, may have abnormality in other coding regions of mt DNA such as tRNA, rRNA or protein genes.
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PMID:[Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia with mitochondrial anomalies. Clinical, histological, biochemical and genetic analysis (9 cases)]. 873 41

A novel G-to-A transition at nucleotide 15915 in mtDNA is described. The patient showed a combination of muscle weakness, hearing loss, mental retardation, and seizures. Muscle biopsy showed RRFs and focal COX deficiency. We sequenced all mtDNA, and found 5 novel nucleotide substitutions. Three of them were synonymous mutations, one was a missense mutation in cytochrome b gene (A-->G at nt 15422), and the last one was the 15915 mutation in tRNA(Thr) gene. We screened for the 15422 and the 15915 mutations with mismatch primers and found that one of 104 normal individuals carried the former one and none of 175 had the latter one. The 15422 mutation existed in homoplasmic states both in the patient and the normal individual, suggesting that this is a polymorphism. In contrast the 15915 mutation resided in heteroplasmic states in muscle, skin fibroblast and blood. The nucleotide substitution at nt 15915 disrupts a highly conserved base pair in anticodon stem of the tRNA(Thr). Our data suggest that the 15915 mutation is an additional mtDNA mutation responsible for mitochondrial encephalomyopathies.
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PMID:A novel mutation in the mitochondrial tRNA(Thr) gene associated with a mitochondrial encephalomyopathy. 876 14

Deficiency of complex I (reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase-ubiquinone oxidoreductase) of the mitochondrial respiratory chain may be seen as a pure myopathy or as a neuromuscular disorder at presentation. Efficacy of long- term therapy for these disorders is yet to be established. We report the case of a female patient with complex I deficiency and skeletal myopathy, who has had a sustained clinical response to riboflavin during 3 years of therapy. Molecular studies found no mutations in the putative flavin mononucleotide binding site in the 51 kd subunit of complex I, but a T-to-C transition at nucleotide 3250 in the mitochondrial DNA tRNA(Leu(UUR)) gene was identified. This mutation has been reported in one other family in that five members had fatigue with or without muscle weakness. There were also five cases of unexplained infant deaths in that family and two cases in the family reported here. Riboflavin therapy should be attempted in all patients with complex I deficiency when the clinical presentation is one of isolated skeletal myopathy.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy with tRNA(Leu(UUR)) mutation and complex I deficiency responsive to riboflavin. 900 64

We report a new mutation, an A-->T transition at nt 3243 in the mitochondrial tRNA(leu)(UUR) gene, in a 9-year-old girl who presented with muscle weakness of 3 years duration complicated by rapidly progressive encephalopathy. In muscle, the activity of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes I, III, and IV was markedly reduced. The mutation, involving a highly conserved base pair in the dihydrouridine loop, was heteroplasmic in muscle (81.4%), skin (69.3%), and blood (13.8%) and was not present in blood of 50 healthy individuals. The mitochondrial 3243 base is a "hot spot" for mutations; an A-->G transition at this position is found in a high proportion in most MELAS patients. Since the A-->T transition creates a new recognition site for the restriction enzyme TspRI, both ApaI and TspRI should be used to exclude a mutation at nt 3243.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy associated with a novel mutation in the mitochondrial tRNA(leu)(UUR) gene (A3243T). 916 4

MERRF (myoclonic epilepsy with ragged-red fibers) is a severe, multisystem disorder characterized by myoclonus, seizures, progressive cerebellar syndrome, muscle weakness, and the presence of ragged-red fibers in the muscle biopsy. MERRF is associated with heteroplasmic point mutations, either A8344G or T8356C, in the gene encoding the mitochondrial tRNA(Lys). The human rho degree cell system was utilized to examine the phenotypic consequences of these mutations, and to investigate their molecular genetic causes. Wild-type and mutant transmitochondrial cell lines harboring a pathogenic point mutation at either A8344G or T8356C in the human mitochondrial tRNA(Lys) gene were isolated and examined. Mitochondrial transformants containing 100% mutated mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNAs) exhibited severe defects in respiratory chain activity, in the rates of protein synthesis, and in the steady-state levels of mitochondrial translation products as compared with mitochondrial transformants containing 100% wild-type mtDNAs. In addition, both mutant cell lines exhibited the presence of aberrant mitochondrial translation products. These results demonstrate that two different mtDNA point mutations in tRNA(Lys) result in fundamentally identical defects at the cellular level, and that these specific protein synthesis abnormalities contribute to the pathogenesis of MERRF.
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PMID:Point mutations in the mitochondrial tRNA(Lys) gene: implications for pathogenesis and mechanism. 930 90

A 16-year-old boy with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy had seizures, short stature, muscle weakness, progressive hearing loss, mental retardation, and myoclonus. His cranial computed tomography showed progressive calcification in the basal ganglia and cerebral atrophy. Muscle biopsy revealed many ragged-red fibers with variable cytochrome c oxidase activity and some strongly succinate dehydrogenase-reactive blood vessels. Sequence analysis of the entire mitochondrial DNA revealed a novel point mutation in the tRNA-Thr gene at nucleotide pair 15915. Serum lactate levels were decreased by high-dose coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) therapy. The spectral power density, a parameter of background activity on electroencephalography, was markedly improved after additional administration of idebenone. After initiation of combined CoQ10 and idebenone therapy, the clinical abnormalities did not progress for 16 months.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with 15915 mutation: clinical report. 936 99

A 30-year-old woman with a novel heteroplasmic U4409C mtDNA mutation in the tRNA(Met) gene presented with growth retardation, muscle weakness, severe exercise intolerance, and lactic acidosis. Muscle biopsy showed unusually severe dystrophic features. The mutation was not present in maternal relatives or 25 healthy subjects. Single-fiber PCR-RFLP analysis of mtDNA showed higher proportion of the mutation in COX-negative than in COX-positive muscle fibers.
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PMID:A new mitochondrial tRNA(Met) gene mutation in a patient with dystrophic muscle and exercise intolerance. 963 49


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