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Featured researches published by Abdelhamid Slama.


The Lancet | 1999

Persistent mitochondrial dysfunction and perinatal exposure to antiretroviral nucleoside analogues

Stéphane Blanche; Marc Tardieu; Pierre Rustin; Abdelhamid Slama; Béatrice Barret; Ghislaine Firtion; Nicole Ciraru-Vigneron; Catherine Lacroix; Christine Rouzioux; Laurent Mandelbrot; Isabelle Desguerre; Agnès Rötig; Marie-Jeanne Mayaux; Jean-François Delfraissy

BACKGROUND Zidovudine is commonly administered during pregnancy to prevent mother-to-child HIV-1 transmission. We investigated mitochondrial toxic effects in children exposed to zidovudine in utero and after birth. METHODS We analysed observations of a trial of tolerance of combined zidovudine and lamivudine and preliminary results of a continuing retrospective analysis of clinical and biological symptoms of mitochondrial dysfunction in children born to HIV-1-infected women in France. Mitochondrial dysfunction was studied by spectrophotometry and polarography of respiratory-chain complexes in various tissues. FINDINGS Eight children had mitochondrial dysfunction. Five, of whom two died, presented with delayed neurological symptoms and three were symptom-free but had severe biological or neurological abnormalities. Four of these children had been exposed to combined zidovudine and lamivudine, and four to zidovudine alone. No child was infected with HIV-1. All children had abnormally low absolute or relative activities of respiratory-chain complexes I, IV, or both months or years after the end of antiretroviral treatment. No mutation currently associated with constitutional disease was detected in any patient. INTERPRETATION Our findings support the hypothesis of a link between mitochondrial dysfunction and the perinatal administration of prophylactic nucleoside analogues. Current recommendations for zidovudine monotherapy should however be maintained. Further assessment of the toxic effects of these drugs is required.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 1999

Recognition and management of fatty acid oxidation defects: A series of 107 patients

J. M. Saudubray; Delphine Martin; P. de Lonlay; Guy Touati; F. Poggi-Travert; Damien Bonnet; Philippe Jouvet; M. Boutron; Abdelhamid Slama; Christine Vianey-Saban; Jean-Paul Bonnefont; D. Rabier; P. Kamoun; Michèle Brivet

In a personal series of 107 patients, we describe clinical presentations, methods of recognition and therapeutic management of inherited fatty acid oxidation (FAO) defects. As a whole, FAO disorders appear very severe: among the 107 patients, only 57 are still living. Including 47 siblings who died early in infancy, in total 97 patients died, of whom 30% died within the first week of life and 69% before 1 year. Twenty-eight patients presented in the neonatal period with sudden death, heart beat disorders, or neurological distress with various metabolic disturbances. Hepatic presentations were observed in 73% of patients (steatosis, hypoketotic hypoglycaemia, hepatomegaly, Reye syndrome). True hepatic failure was rare (10%); cholestasis was observed in one patient with LCHAD deficiency. Cardiac presentations were observed in 51% of patients: 67% patients presented with cardiomyopathy, mostly hypertrophic, and 47% of patients had heart beat disorders with various conduction abnormalities and arrhythmias responsible for collapse, near-miss and sudden unexpected death. All enzymatic blocks affecting FAO except CPT I and MCAD were found associated with cardiac signs. Muscular signs were observed in 51% of patients (of whom 64% had myalgias or paroxysmal myoglobinuria, and 29% had progressive proximal myopathy). Chronic neurologic presentation was rare, except in LCHAD deficiency (retinitis pigmentosa and peripheral neuropathy). Renal presentation (tubulopathy) and transient renal failure were observed in 27% of patients. The diagnosis of FAO disorders is generally based on the plasma acylcarnitine profile determined by FAB-MS/MS from simple blood spots collected on a Guthrie card. Urinary organic acid profile and total and free plasma carnitine can also be very helpful, mostly in acute attacks. If there is no significant disturbance between attacks, the diagnosis is based upon a long-chain fatty acid loading test, fasting test, and in vitro studies of fatty acid oxidation on fresh lymphocytes or cultured fibroblasts. Treatment includes avoiding fasting or catabolism, suppressing lipolysis, and carnitine supplementation. The long-term dietary therapy aims to prevent periods of fasting and restrict long-chain fatty acid intake with supplementation of medium-chain triglycerides. Despite these therapeutic measures, the long-term prognosis remains uncertain.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2004

Mutant NDUFS3 subunit of mitochondrial complex I causes Leigh syndrome

Paule Bénit; Abdelhamid Slama; F Cartault; Irina Giurgea; Dominique Chretien; Sophie Lebon; C Marsac; Arnold Munnich; Agnès Rötig; Pierre Rustin

Respiratory chain complex I deficiency represents a genetically heterogeneous group of diseases resulting from mutations in mitochondrial or nuclear genes. Mutations have been reported in 13 of the 14 subunits encoding the core of complex I (seven mitochondrial and six nuclear genes) and these result in Leigh or Leigh-like syndromes or cardiomyopathy. In this study, a combination of denaturing high performance liquid chromatography and sequence analysis was used to study the NDUFS3 gene in a series of complex I deficient patients. Mutations found in this gene (NADH dehydrogenase iron-sulphur protein 3), coding for the seventh and last subunit of complex I core, were shown to cause late onset Leigh syndrome, optic atrophy, and complex I deficiency. A biochemical diagnosis of complex I deficiency on cultured amniocytes from a later pregnancy was confirmed through the identification of disease causing NDUFS3 mutations in these cells. While mutations in the NDUFS3 gene thus result in Leigh syndrome, a dissimilar clinical phenotype is observed in mutations in the NDUFV2 and NDUFS2 genes, resulting in encephalomyopathy and cardiomyopathy. The reasons for these differences are uncertain.


Annals of Neurology | 2007

Twinkle helicase (PEO1) gene mutation causes mitochondrial DNA depletion

Emmanuelle Sarzi; Steffi Goffart; Valérie Serre; Dominique Chretien; Abdelhamid Slama; Arnold Munnich; Johannes N. Spelbrink; Agnès Rötig

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion syndrome (MDS) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of autosomal recessive diseases characterized by a reduction in mtDNA copy number. Several nuclear genes have been shown to account for these severe oxidative phosphorylation disorders, but the disease‐causing mutations remain largely unknown.


Mitochondrion | 2009

Development and implementation of standardized respiratory chain spectrophotometric assays for clinical diagnosis

F. Medja; Stéphane Allouche; P. Frachon; Claude Jardel; M. Malgat; B. Mousson de Camaret; Abdelhamid Slama; J. Lunardi; J.P. Mazat; A. Lombès

Diversity of respiratory chain spectrophotometric assays may lead to difficult comparison of results between centers. The French network of mitochondrial diseases diagnostic centers undertook comparison of the results obtained with different protocols in the French diagnostic centers. The diversity of protocols was shown to have striking consequences, which prompted the network to undertake standardization and optimization of the protocols with respect to clinical diagnosis, i.e. high velocity while maintaining linear kinetics relative to time and enzyme concentration. Assays were set up on animal tissues and verified on control human muscle and fibroblasts. Influence of homogenization buffer and narrow range of optimal concentration of phosphate, substrate and tissue were shown. Experimental data and proposed protocols have been posted on a free access website. Their subsequent use in several diagnostic centers has improved consistency for all assays.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 1999

Defects in activation and transport of fatty acids.

M. Brivet; Audrey Boutron; Abdelhamid Slama; C. Costa; L. Thuillier; F. Demaugre; D. Rabier; J. M. Saudubray; Jean-Paul Bonnefont

The oxidation of long-chain fatty acids in mitochondria plays an important role in energy production, especially in skeletal muscle, heart and liver. Long-chain fatty acids, activated to their CoA esters in the cytosol, are shuttled across the barrier of the inner mitochondrial membrane by the carnitine cycle. This pathway includes four steps, mediated by a plasma membrane carnitine transporter, two carnitine palmitoyltransferases (CPT I and CPT II) and a carnitine-acylcarnitine translocase. Defects in activation and uptake of fatty acids affect these four steps: CPT II deficiency leads to either exercise-induced rhabdomyolysis in adults or hepatocardiomuscular symptoms in neonates and children. The three other disorders of the carnitine cycle have an early onset. Hepatic CPT I deficiency is characterized by recurrent episodes of Reye-like syndrome, whereas severe muscular and cardiac signs are associated with episodes of fasting hypoglycaemia in defects of carnitine transport and translocase. Convenient metabolic investigations for reaching the diagnosis of carnitine cycle disorders are determination of plasma free and total carnitine concentrations, determination of plasma acylcarnitine profile by tandem mass spectrometry and in vitro fatty acid oxidation studies, particularly in fresh lymphocytes. Application of the tools of molecular biology has greatly aided the understanding of the carnitine palmitoyltransferase enzyme system and confirmed the existence of different related genetic diseases. Mutation analysis of CPT II defects has given some clues for correlation of genotype and phenotype. The first molecular analyses of hepatic CPT I and translocase deficiencies were recently reported.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2003

Impaired mitochondrial pyruvate importation in a patient and a fetus at risk

Michèle Brivet; A Garcia-Cazorla; S Lyonnet; Y Dumez; M.C Nassogne; Abdelhamid Slama; Audrey Boutron; Guy Touati; Alain Legrand; J. M. Saudubray

The patient was the first child of healthy consanguineous parents. She presented at birth with hypotonia, mild facial dysmorphism, periventricular cysts, marked metabolic acidosis, hyperlactacidemia with normal lactate/pyruvate molar ratios, normoglycemia, and normal ammonia. Hyperlactacidemia was severe (5-14 mmol/l) and not corrected with bicarbonate, thiamine (10 mg/d), 2-chloropropionate (100 mg/kg/d) and a ketogenic diet. Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDHC) activity was normal in lymphocytes and fibroblasts. Functional assays were performed in digitonin-permeabilized fibroblasts to measure oxidation rates from radiolabeled pyruvate and malate. The production of [14C]acetylcarnitine or [14C]citric cycle intermediates derived from [2-14C]pyruvate as well as the release of 14CO(2) from [1-14C]pyruvate was severely impaired, whereas decarboxylation of [U-14C]malate was normal. With increasing concentrations of [1-14C]pyruvate, the patients fibroblasts behave like control fibroblasts incubated in the presence of alpha-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamate, a specific inhibitor of mitochondrial pyruvate uptake: a progressive increase in 14CO(2) production was observed, likely due to passive diffusion of [1-14C]pyruvate through the mitochondrial membranes. Our results are consistent with a defect of mitochondrial pyruvate transport in the patient. Mutational analysis was precluded as the cDNA sequence of the pyruvate carrier has not been identified as yet in any organism. An affected fetus was recognized in a subsequent dichorionic twin pregnancy using the coupled assay measuring [2-14C]pyruvate oxidation rates on digitonin-permeabilized trophoblasts. After selective feticide, the pregnancy was uncomplicated with delivery at 37w of a healthy female, who is currently 2-month old.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

Prevalence of rare mitochondrial DNA mutations in mitochondrial disorders

Sylvie Bannwarth; Vincent Procaccio; Anne Sophie Lebre; Claude Jardel; Annabelle Chaussenot; Claire Hoarau; Hassani Maoulida; Nathanaël Charrier; Xiaowu Gai; Hongbo M. Xie; Marc Ferré; Konstantina Fragaki; Gaëlle Hardy; Bénédicte Mousson de Camaret; Sandrine Marlin; Claire Marie Dhaenens; Abdelhamid Slama; Christophe Rocher; Jean Paul Bonnefont; Agnès Rötig; Nadia Aoutil; Mylène Gilleron; Valérie Desquiret-Dumas; Pascal Reynier; Jennifer Ceresuela; Laurence Jonard; Aurore Devos; Caroline Espil-Taris; Delphine Martinez; Pauline Gaignard

Abstract Background Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diseases are rare disorders whose prevalence is estimated around 1 in 5000. Patients are usually tested only for deletions and for common mutations of mtDNA which account for 5–40% of cases, depending on the study. However, the prevalence of rare mtDNA mutations is not known. Methods We analysed the whole mtDNA in a cohort of 743 patients suspected of manifesting a mitochondrial disease, after excluding deletions and common mutations. Both heteroplasmic and homoplasmic variants were identified using two complementary strategies (Surveyor and MitoChip). Multiple correspondence analyses followed by hierarchical ascendant cluster process were used to explore relationships between clinical spectrum, age at onset and localisation of mutations. Results 7.4% of deleterious mutations and 22.4% of novel putative mutations were identified. Pathogenic heteroplasmic mutations were more frequent than homoplasmic mutations (4.6% vs 2.8%). Patients carrying deleterious mutations showed symptoms before 16 years of age in 67% of cases. Early onset disease (<1 year) was significantly associated with mutations in protein coding genes (mainly in complex I) while late onset disorders (>16 years) were associated with mutations in tRNA genes. MTND5 and MTND6 genes were identified as ‘hotspots’ of mutations, with Leigh syndrome accounting for the large majority of associated phenotypes. Conclusions Rare mitochondrial DNA mutations probably account for more than 7.4% of patients with respiratory chain deficiency. This study shows that a comprehensive analysis of mtDNA is essential, and should include young children, for an accurate diagnosis that is now accessible with the development of next generation sequencing technology.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2012

Mitochondrial complex I deficiency of nuclear origin

Hélène Pagniez-Mammeri; Sandrine Loublier; Alain Legrand; Paule Bénit; Pierre Rustin; Abdelhamid Slama

Complex I deficiency is the most frequent cause of respiratory chain diseases. This large multiprotein complex is composed in human of 45 structural subunits, of which 7 are mitochondrial-encoded and 38 are nuclear-encoded. Most of the pathological mutations responsible for complex I deficiencies have been identified to date in complex I structural subunits. Numerous studies from last decade gave some insight into the biogenesis of this huge multi subunit complex of double genetic origin. A sequential incorporation of the structural subunits as well as ten complex I assembly factors has been described. Here, we present a short overview of the human complex I biogenesis and we review the pathological mutations identified to date in eight of the ten known complex I assembly factors.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2012

Mitochondrial complex I deficiency of nuclear origin: I. Structural genes

Hélène Pagniez-Mammeri; Sandrine Loublier; Alain Legrand; Paule Bénit; Pierre Rustin; Abdelhamid Slama

Complex I (or NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase), is by far the largest respiratory chain complex with 38 subunits nuclearly encoded and 7 subunits encoded by the mitochondrial genome. Its deficiency is the most frequently encountered in mitochondrial disorders. Here, we summarize recent data obtained on architecture of complex I, and review the pathogenic mutations identified to date in nuclear structural complex I genes. The structural NDUFS1, NDUFS2, NDUFV1, and NDUFS4 genes are mutational hot spot genes for isolated complex I deficiency. The majority of the pathogenic mutations are private and the genotype-phenotype correlation is inconsistent in the rare recurrent mutations.

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Michèle Brivet

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Alain Legrand

Paris Descartes University

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Arnold Munnich

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Agnès Rötig

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Guy Touati

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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Isabelle Desguerre

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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J. M. Saudubray

Necker-Enfants Malades Hospital

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