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American Journal of Human Genetics | 2007

Mitochondrial Phosphate–Carrier Deficiency: A Novel Disorder of Oxidative Phosphorylation

Johannes A. Mayr; Olaf Merkel; Sepp D. Kohlwein; B Gebhardt; Hansjosef Böhles; Ulrike Fötschl; Johannes Koch; Michaela Jaksch; Hanns Lochmüller; Rita Horvath; Peter Freisinger; Wolfgang Sperl

The mitochondrial phosphate carrier SLC25A3 transports inorganic phosphate into the mitochondrial matrix, which is essential for the aerobic synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). We identified a homozygous mutation--c.215G-->A (p.Gly72Glu)--in the alternatively spliced exon 3A of this enzyme in two siblings with lactic acidosis, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, and muscular hypotonia who died within the 1st year of life. Functional investigation of intact mitochondria showed a deficiency of ATP synthesis in muscle but not in fibroblasts, which correlated with the tissue-specific expression of exon 3A in muscle versus exon 3B in fibroblasts. The enzyme defect was confirmed by complementation analysis in yeast. This is the first report of patients with mitochondrial phosphate-carrier deficiency.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Mitochondrial ATP synthase deficiency due to a mutation in the ATP5E gene for the F1 ε subunit

Johannes A. Mayr; Vendula Havlíčková; Franz A. Zimmermann; Iris Magler; Vilma Kaplanová; Pavel Ješina; Alena Pecinová; Hana Nůsková; Johannes Koch; Wolfgang Sperl; Josef Houštěk

F1Fo-ATP synthase is a key enzyme of mitochondrial energy provision producing most of cellular ATP. So far, mitochondrial diseases caused by isolated disorders of the ATP synthase have been shown to result from mutations in mtDNA genes for the subunits ATP6 and ATP8 or in nuclear genes encoding the biogenesis factors TMEM70 and ATPAF2. Here, we describe a patient with a homozygous p.Tyr12Cys mutation in the epsilon subunit encoded by the nuclear gene ATP5E. The 22-year-old woman presented with neonatal onset, lactic acidosis, 3-methylglutaconic aciduria, mild mental retardation and developed peripheral neuropathy. Patient fibroblasts showed 60-70% decrease in both oligomycin-sensitive ATPase activity and mitochondrial ATP synthesis. The mitochondrial content of the ATP synthase complex was equally reduced, but its size was normal and it contained the mutated epsilon subunit. A similar reduction was found in all investigated F1 and Fo subunits with the exception of Fo subunit c, which was found to accumulate in a detergent-insoluble form. This is the first case of a mitochondrial disease due to a mutation in a nuclear encoded structural subunit of the ATP synthase. Our results indicate an essential role of the epsilon subunit in the biosynthesis and assembly of the F1 part of the ATP synthase. Furthermore, the epsilon subunit seems to be involved in the incorporation of subunit c to the rotor structure of the mammalian enzyme.


Archives of Disease in Childhood | 2010

Mitochondrial encephalocardio-myopathy with early neonatal onset due to TMEM70 mutation

Tomas Honzik; Markéta Tesařová; Johannes A. Mayr; Hana Hansikova; Pavel Ješina; Olaf A. Bodamer; Johannes Koch; Martin Magner; Peter Freisinger; Martina Huemer; Olga Kostková; Rudy Van Coster; Stanislav Kmoch; Josef Houstek; Wolfgang Sperl; Jiří Zeman

Objective Mitochondrial disturbances of energygenerating systems in childhood are a heterogeneous group of disorders. The aim of this multi-site survey was to characterise the natural course of a novel mitochondrial disease with ATP synthase deficiency and mutation in the TMEM70 gene. Methods Retrospective clinical data and metabolic profiles were collected and evaluated in 25 patients (14 boys, 11 girls) from seven European countries with a c.317-2A→G mutation in the TMEM70 gene. Results Severe muscular hypotonia (in 92% of newborns), apnoic spells (92%), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCMP; 76%) and profound lactic acidosis (lactate 5–36 mmol/l; 92%) with hyperammonaemia (100–520 µmol/l; 86%) were present from birth. Ten patients died within the first 6 weeks of life. Most patients surviving the neonatal period had persisting muscular hypotonia and developed psychomotor delay. HCMP was non-progressive and even disappeared in some children. Hypospadia was present in 54% of the boys and cryptorchidism in 67%. Increased excretion of lactate and 3-methylglutaconic acid (3-MGC) was observed in all patients. In four surviving patients, life-threatening hyperammonaemia occurred during childhood, triggered by acute gastroenteritis and prolonged fasting. Conclusions ATP synthase deficiency with mutation in TMEM70 should be considered in the diagnosis and management of critically ill neonates with early neonatal onset of muscular hypotonia, HCMP and hypospadias in boys accompanied by lactic acidosis, hyperammonaemia and 3-MGC-uria. However, phenotype severity may vary significantly. The disease occurs frequently in the Roma population and molecular-genetic analysis of the TMEM70 gene is sufficient for diagnosis without need of muscle biopsy in affected children.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2012

Mutation screening of 75 candidate genes in 152 complex I deficiency cases identifies pathogenic variants in 16 genes including NDUFB9

Tobias B. Haack; Florence Madignier; Martina Herzer; Eleonora Lamantea; Katharina Danhauser; Federica Invernizzi; Johannes Koch; Martin Freitag; Rene Drost; Ingo Hillier; Birgit Haberberger; Johannes A. Mayr; Uwe Ahting; Valeria Tiranti; Agnès Rötig; Arcangela Iuso; Rita Horvath; Marketa Tesarova; Ivo Barić; Graziella Uziel; Boris Rolinski; Wolfgang Sperl; Thomas Meitinger; Massimo Zeviani; Peter Freisinger; Holger Prokisch

Background Mitochondrial complex I deficiency is the most common cause of mitochondrial disease in childhood. Identification of the molecular basis is difficult given the clinical and genetic heterogeneity. Most patients lack a molecular definition in routine diagnostics. Methods A large-scale mutation screen of 75 candidate genes in 152 patients with complex I deficiency was performed by high-resolution melting curve analysis and Sanger sequencing. The causal role of a new disease allele was confirmed by functional complementation assays. The clinical phenotype of patients carrying mutations was documented using a standardised questionnaire. Results Causative mutations were detected in 16 genes, 15 of which had previously been associated with complex I deficiency: three mitochondrial DNA genes encoding complex I subunits, two mitochondrial tRNA genes and nuclear DNA genes encoding six complex I subunits and four assembly factors. For the first time, a causal mutation is described in NDUFB9, coding for a complex I subunit, resulting in reduction in NDUFB9 protein and both amount and activity of complex I. These features were rescued by expression of wild-type NDUFB9 in patient-derived fibroblasts. Conclusion Mutant NDUFB9 is a new cause of complex I deficiency. A molecular diagnosis related to complex I deficiency was established in 18% of patients. However, most patients are likely to carry mutations in genes so far not associated with complex I function. The authors conclude that the high degree of genetic heterogeneity in complex I disorders warrants the implementation of unbiased genome-wide strategies for the complete molecular dissection of mitochondrial complex I deficiency.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2015

Spectrum of combined respiratory chain defects

Johannes A. Mayr; Tobias B. Haack; Peter Freisinger; Daniela Karall; Christine Makowski; Johannes Koch; René G. Feichtinger; Franz A. Zimmermann; Boris Rolinski; Uwe Ahting; Thomas Meitinger; Holger Prokisch; Wolfgang Sperl

Inherited disorders of mitochondrial energy metabolism form a large and heterogeneous group of metabolic diseases. More than 250 gene defects have been reported to date and this number continues to grow. Mitochondrial diseases can be grouped into (1) disorders of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) subunits and their assembly factors, (2) defects of mitochondrial DNA, RNA and protein synthesis, (3) defects in the substrate-generating upstream reactions of OXPHOS, (4) defects in relevant cofactors and (5) defects in mitochondrial homeostasis. Deficiency of more than one respiratory chain enzyme is a common finding. Combined defects are found in 49xa0% of the known disease-causing genes of mitochondrial energy metabolism and in 57xa0% of patients with OXPHOS defects identified in our diagnostic centre. Combined defects of complexes I, III, IV and V are typically due to deficiency of mitochondrial DNA replication, RNA metabolism or translation. Defects in cofactors can result in combined defects of various combinations, and defects of mitochondrial homeostasis can result in a generalised decrease of all OXPHOS enzymes. Noteworthy, identification of combined defects can be complicated by different degrees of severity of each affected enzyme. Furthermore, even defects of single respiratory chain enzymes can result in combined defects due to aberrant formation of respiratory chain supercomplexes. Combined OXPHOS defects have a great variety of clinical manifestations in terms of onset, course severity and tissue involvement. They can present as classical encephalomyopathy but also with hepatopathy, nephropathy, haematologic findings and Perrault syndrome in a subset of disorders.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2015

TMEM70 deficiency: long-term outcome of 48 patients

Martin Magner; Veronika Dvorakova; Marketa Tesarova; Stella Mazurova; Hana Hansikova; Martin Zahorec; Katarina Brennerova; V. Bzduch; Ronen Spiegel; Yoseph Horovitz; Hanna Mandel; Fatma Tuba Eminoğlu; Johannes A. Mayr; Johannes Koch; Diego Martinelli; Enrico Bertini; Vassiliki Konstantopoulou; Joél Smet; Shamima Rahman; Alexander Broomfield; Vesna Stojanovic; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Rudy Van Coster; Eva Morava-Kozicz; Wolfgang Sperl; Jiri Zeman; Tomas Honzik

ObjectivesTMEM70 deficiency is the most common nuclear-encoded defect affecting the ATP synthase. In this multicentre retrospective study we characterise the natural history of the disease, treatment and outcome in 48 patients with mutations in TMEM70. Eleven centers from eight European countries, Turkey and Israel participated.ResultsAll 27 Roma and eight non-Roma patients were homozygous for the common mutation c.317-2Au2009>u2009G. Five patients were compound heterozygotes for the common mutation and mutations c.470xa0Tu2009>u2009A, c.628Au2009>u2009C, c.118_119insGT or c.251delC. Six Arab Muslims and two Turkish patients were homozygous for mutations c.238Cu2009>u2009T, c.316u2009+u20091Gu2009>u2009T, c.336xa0Tu2009>u2009A, c.578_579delCA, c.535Cu2009>u2009T, c.359delC. Age of onset was neonatal in 41 patients, infantile in six cases and two years in one child. The most frequent symptoms at onset were poor feeding, hypotonia, lethargy, respiratory and heart failure, accompanied by lactic acidosis, 3-methylglutaconic aciduria and hyperammonaemia. Symptoms further included: developmental delay (98xa0%), hypotonia (95xa0%), faltering growth (94xa0%), short stature (89xa0%), non-progressive cardiomyopathy (89xa0%), microcephaly (71xa0%), facial dysmorphism (66xa0%), hypospadias (50xa0% of the males), persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn (22xa0%) and Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (13xa0%). One or more acute metabolic crises occurred in 24 surviving children, frequently followed by developmental regression. Hyperammonaemic episodes responded well to infusion with glucose and lipid emulsion, and ammonia scavengers or haemodiafiltration. Ten-year survival was 63xa0%, importantly for prognostication, no child died after the age of five years.ConclusionTMEM70 deficiency is a panethnic, multisystemic disease with variable outcome depending mainly on adequate management of hyperammonaemic crises in the neonatal period and early childhood.


Brain | 2015

LRPPRC mutations cause early-onset multisystem mitochondrial disease outside of the French-Canadian population.

Monika Oláhová; Steven A. Hardy; Julie Hall; John W. Yarham; Tobias B. Haack; William C. Wilson; Charlotte L. Alston; Langping He; Erik Aznauryan; Ruth M. Brown; Garry K. Brown; A. A. M. Morris; Helen Mundy; Alex Broomfield; Ines A. Barbosa; Michael A. Simpson; Charu Deshpande; Dorothea Moeslinger; Johannes Koch; Georg M. Stettner; Penelope E. Bonnen; Holger Prokisch; Robert N. Lightowlers; Robert McFarland; Zofia M.A. Chrzanowska-Lightowlers; Robert W. Taylor

The French-Canadian variant of COX-deficient Leigh syndrome (LSFC) is unique to Québec and caused by a founder mutation in the LRPPRC gene. Using whole exome sequencing, Oláhová et al. identify mutations in this gene associated with multisystem mitochondrial disease and early-onset neurodevelopmental problems in ten patients from different ethnic backgrounds.


Neuropediatrics | 2010

Leigh Disease with Brainstem Involvement in Complex I Deficiency due to Assembly Factor NDUFAF2 Defect

M. Herzer; Johannes Koch; Holger Prokisch; R.J.T. Rodenburg; Christian Rauscher; W. Radauer; R. Forstner; P. Pilz; B. Rolinski; Peter Freisinger; Johannes A. Mayr; Wolfgang Sperl

Mitochondrial NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) deficiency accounts for most defects in mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Pathogenic mutations have been described in all 7 mitochondrial and 12 of the 38 nuclear encoded subunits as well as in assembly factors by interfering with the building of the mature enzyme complex within the inner mitochondrial membrane. We now describe a male patient with a novel homozygous stop mutation in the NDUFAF2 gene. The boy presented with severe apnoea and nystagmus. MRI showed brainstem lesions without involvement of basal ganglia and thalamus, plasma lactate was normal or close to normal. He died after a fulminate course within 2 months after the first crisis. Neuropathology verified Leigh disease. We give a synopsis with other reported patients. Within the clinical spectrum of Leigh disease, patients with mutations in NDUFAF2 present with a distinct clinical pattern with predominantly brainstem involvement on MRI. The diagnosis should not be missed in spite of the normal lactate and lack of thalamus and basal ganglia changes on brain MRI.


Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2015

The spectrum of pyruvate oxidation defects in the diagnosis of mitochondrial disorders

Wolfgang Sperl; Leanne Fleuren; Peter Freisinger; Tobias B. Haack; Antonia Ribes; René G. Feichtinger; Richard J. Rodenburg; Franz A. Zimmermann; Johannes Koch; Isabel Rivera; Holger Prokisch; Jan A.M. Smeitink; Johannes A. Mayr

Pyruvate oxidation defects (PODs) are among the most frequent causes of deficiencies in the mitochondrial energy metabolism and represent a substantial subset of classical mitochondrial diseases. PODs are not only caused by deficiency of subunits of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHC) but also by various disorders recently described in the whole pyruvate oxidation route including cofactors, regulation of PDHC and the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier. Our own patients from 2000 to July 2014 and patients identified by a systematic survey of the literature from 1970 to July 2014 with a pyruvate oxidation disorder and a genetically proven defect were included in the study (n=628). Of these defects 74.2% (n=466) belong to PDHC subunits, 24.5% (n=154) to cofactors, 0.5% (n=3) to PDHC regulation and 0.8% (n=5) to mitochondrial pyruvate import. PODs are underestimated in the field of mitochondrial diseases because not all diagnostic centres include biochemical investigations of PDHC in their routine analysis. Cofactor and transport defects can be missed, if pyruvate oxidation is not measured in intact mitochondria routinely. Furthermore deficiency of the X-chromosomal PDHA1 can be biochemically missed depending on the X-inactivation pattern. This is reflected by an increasing number of patients diagnosed recently by genetic high throughput screening approaches. PDHC deficiency including regulation and import affect mainly the glucose dependent central and peripheral nervous system and skeletal muscle. PODs with combined enzyme defects affect also other organs like heart, lung and liver. The spectrum of clinical presentation of PODs is still expanding. PODs are a therapeutically interesting group of mitochondrial diseases since some can be bypassed by ketogenic diet or treated by cofactor supplementation. PDHC kinase inhibition, chaperone therapy and PGC1α stimulation is still a matter of further investigations.


Brain | 2017

CAD mutations and uridine-responsive epileptic encephalopathy

Johannes Koch; Johannes A. Mayr; Bader Alhaddad; Christian Rauscher; Jörgen Bierau; Reka Kovacs-Nagy; Karlien L.M. Coene; Ingrid Bader; Monika Holzhacker; Holger Prokisch; Hanka Venselaar; Ron A. Wevers; Felix Distelmaier; Tilman Polster; Steffen Leiz; Cornelia Betzler; Tim M. Strom; Wolfgang Sperl; Thomas Meitinger; Saskia B. Wortmann; Tobias B. Haack

Unexplained global developmental delay and epilepsy in childhood pose a major socioeconomic burden. Progress in defining the molecular bases does not often translate into effective treatment. Notable exceptions include certain inborn errors of metabolism amenable to dietary intervention. CAD encodes a multifunctional enzyme involved in de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis. Alternatively, pyrimidines can be recycled from uridine. Exome sequencing in three families identified biallelic CAD mutations in four children with global developmental delay, epileptic encephalopathy, and anaemia with anisopoikilocytosis. Two died aged 4 and 5 years after a neurodegenerative disease course. Supplementation of the two surviving children with oral uridine led to immediate cessation of seizures in both. A 4-year-old female, previously in a minimally conscious state, began to communicate and walk with assistance after 9 weeks of treatment. A 3-year-old female likewise showed developmental progress. Blood smears normalized and anaemia resolved. We establish CAD as a gene confidently implicated in this neurometabolic disorder, characterized by co-occurrence of global developmental delay, dyserythropoietic anaemia and seizures. While the natural disease course can be lethal in early childhood, our findings support the efficacy of uridine supplementation, rendering CAD deficiency a treatable neurometabolic disorder and therefore a potential condition for future (genetic) newborn screening.

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Wolfgang Sperl

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Johannes A. Mayr

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Peter Freisinger

Boston Children's Hospital

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Christian Rauscher

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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René G. Feichtinger

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Cornelia Betzler

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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