Rosalba Carrozzo
Boston Children's Hospital
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Featured researches published by Rosalba Carrozzo.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 1998
Valeria Tiranti; Konstanze Hoertnagel; Rosalba Carrozzo; Claudia Galimberti; Monica Munaro; Matteo Granatiero; Leopoldo Zelante; Paolo Gasparini; Rosalia Marzella; Mariano Rocchi; M. Pilar Bayona-Bafaluy; Josè-Antonio Enriquez; Graziella Uziel; Enrico Bertini; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Brunella Franco; Thomas Meitinger; Massimo Zeviani
Leigh disease associated with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency (LD[COX-]) is one of the most common disorders of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, in infancy and childhood. No mutations in any of the genes encoding the COX-protein subunits have been identified in LD(COX-) patients. Using complementation assays based on the fusion of LD(COX-) cell lines with several rodent/human rho0 hybrids, we demonstrated that the COX phenotype was rescued by the presence of a normal human chromosome 9. Linkage analysis restricted the disease locus to the subtelomeric region of chromosome 9q, within the 7-cM interval between markers D9S1847 and D9S1826. Candidate genes within this region include SURF-1, the yeast homologue (SHY-1) of which encodes a mitochondrial protein necessary for the maintenance of COX activity and respiration. Sequence analysis of SURF-1 revealed mutations in numerous DNA samples from LD(COX-) patients, indicating that this gene is responsible for the major complementation group in this important mitochondrial disorder.
European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001
Fiorella Piemonte; Anna Pastore; Giulia Tozzi; D. Tagliacozzi; Filippo M. Santorelli; Rosalba Carrozzo; C. Casali; M. Damiano; Giorgio Federici; Enrico Bertini
Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction have long been considered to play a role in Friedreichs ataxia, a neurodegenerative disease due to a GAA expansion in a gene coding for a mitochondrial protein (frataxin), implicated in the regulation of iron metabolism. Since glutathione is an important antioxidant whose role has been recently proposed in the pathogenesis of some neurodegenerative diseases, we investigated glutathione metabolism in the blood of 14 patients with Friedreichs ataxia by measuring total, free and protein‐bound glutathione concentrations.
Human Mutation | 2008
David Dimmock; Qing Zhang; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Rosalba Carrozzo; Joseph T.C. Shieh; L. Y. Tang; Cavatina K. Truong; Eric S. Schmitt; M. Sifry-Platt; S. Lucioli; Filippo M. Santorelli; Can Ficicioglu; M. Rodriguez; K. Wierenga; Gregory M. Enns; Nicola Longo; M. H. Lipson; H.D. Vallance; William J. Craigen; Fernando Scaglia; L. J. Wong
Published mutations in deoxyguanosine kinase (DGUOK) cause mitochondrial DNA depletion and a clinical phenotype that consists of neonatal liver failure, nystagmus and hypotonia. In this series, we have identified 15 different mutations in the DGUOK gene from 9 kindreds. Among them, 12 have not previously been reported. Nonsense, splice site, or frame‐shift mutations that produce truncated proteins predominate over missense mutations. All patients who harbor null mutations had early onset liver failure and significant neurological disease. These patients have all died before 2‐years of age. Conversely, two patients carrying missense mutations had isolated liver disease and are alive in their 4th year of life without liver transplant. Five subjects were detected by newborn screening, with elevated tyrosine or phenylalanine. Consequently, this disease should be considered if elevated tyrosine is identified by newborn screening. Mitochondrial DNA content was below 10% of controls in liver in all but one case and modestly reduced in blood cells. With this paper a total of 39 different mutations in DGUOK have been identified. The most frequent mutation, c.763_c.766dupGATT, occurs in 8 unrelated kindreds. 70% of mutations occur in only one kindred, suggesting full sequencing of this gene is required for diagnosis. The presentation of one case with apparent viral hepatitis, without neurological disease, suggests that this disease should be considered in patients with infantile liver failure regardless of the presence of neurological features or apparent infectious etiology.
The FASEB Journal | 2010
Catarina M. Quinzii; Luis C. López; Robert W. Gilkerson; Beatriz Dorado; Jorida Coku; Ali Naini; Clotilde Lagier-Tourenne; Markus Schuelke; Leonardo Salviati; Rosalba Carrozzo; Filippo M. Santorelli; Shamima Rahman; Meriem Tazir; Michel Koenig; Salvatore DiMauro; Michio Hirano
Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) is essential for electron transport in the mitochondrial respiratory chain and antioxidant defense. The relative importance of respiratory chain defects, ROS production, and apoptosis in the pathogenesis of CoQ10 deficiency is unknown. We determined previously that severe CoQ10 deficiency in cultured skin fibroblasts harboring COQ2 and PDSS2 mutations produces divergent alterations of bioenergetics and oxidative stress. Here, to better understand the pathogenesis of CoQ10 deficiency, we have characterized the effects of varying severities of CoQ10 deficiency on ROS production and mitochondrial bioenergetics in cells harboring genetic defects of CoQ10 biosynthesis. Levels of CoQ10 seem to correlate with ROS production;10‐15% and >60% residual CoQ10 are not associated with significant ROS production, whereas 30‐50% residual CoQ10 is accompanied by increased ROS production and cell death. Our results confirm that varying degrees of CoQ10 deficiency cause variable defects of ATP synthesis and oxidative stress. These findings may lead to more rational therapeutic strategies for CoQ10 deficiency.— Quinzii, C. M., Lopez, L. C., Gilkerson, R. W., Dorado, B., Coku, J., Naini, A. B., Lagier‐Tourenne, C., Schuelke, M., Salviati, L., Carrozzo, R., Santorelli, F., Rahman, S., Tazir, M., Koenig, M., DiMauro, S., Hirano, M. Reactive oxygen species, oxidative stress, and cell death correlate with level of CoQ10 deficiency. FASEB J. 24, 3733–3743 (2010). www.fasebj.org
Neurology | 2001
Rosalba Carrozzo; Alessandra Tessa; M.E. Vazquez-Memije; Fiorella Piemonte; Clarice Patrono; Alessandro Malandrini; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Laura Vilarinho; Marcello Villanova; H. Schagger; Antonio Federico; Enrico Bertini; Filippo M. Santorelli
The authors identified a novel mtDNA mutation (T9176G) in the ATPase 6 gene in a family in which a 10-year-old girl had a severe neurodegenerative disorder, her elder sister had died of Leigh syndrome (LS), and a maternal uncle had a spinocerebellar disorder. Biochemical studies disclosed a reduced rate of ATP synthesis in skin fibroblast cultures from the proposita as the likely explanation of her severe illness. The findings expand the genetic variants associated with LS.
Annals of Neurology | 2006
Rosalba Carrozzo; Ilka Wittig; Filippo M. Santorelli; Enrico Bertini; Sabine Hofmann; Ulrich Brandt; Hermann Schägger
Methods: We describe biochemically and clinically relevant aspects of mitochondrial ATP synthase, the enzyme that supplies most ATP for the cells energy demand.
Brain | 2013
Diego Martinelli; Lorena Travaglini; Christian A. Drouin; Irène Ceballos-Picot; Teresa Rizza; Enrico Bertini; Rosalba Carrozzo; Stefania Petrini; Pascale de Lonlay; Maya El Hachem; Laurence Hubert; Alexandre Montpetit; G. Torre; Carlo Dionisi-Vici
MEDNIK syndrome-acronym for mental retardation, enteropathy, deafness, neuropathy, ichthyosis, keratodermia-is caused by AP1S1 gene mutations, encoding σ1A, the small subunit of the adaptor protein 1 complex, which plays a crucial role in clathrin coat assembly and mediates trafficking between trans-Golgi network, endosomes and the plasma membrane. MEDNIK syndrome was first reported in a few French-Canadian families sharing common ancestors, presenting a complex neurocutaneous phenotype, but its pathogenesis is not completely understood. A Sephardic-Jewish patient, carrying a new AP1S1 homozygous mutation, showed severe perturbations of copper metabolism with hypocupremia, hypoceruloplasminemia and liver copper accumulation, along with intrahepatic cholestasis. Zinc acetate treatment strikingly improved clinical conditions, as well as liver copper and bile-acid overload. We evaluated copper-related metabolites and liver function retrospectively in the original French-Canadian patient series. Intracellular copper metabolism and subcellular localization and function of copper pump ATP7A were investigated in patient fibroblasts. Copper metabolism perturbation and hepatopathy were confirmed in all patients. Studies in mutant fibroblasts showed abnormal copper incorporation and retention, reduced expression of copper-dependent enzymes cytochrome-c-oxidase and Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase, and aberrant intracellular trafficking of Menkes protein ATP7A, which normalized after rescue experiments expressing wild-type AP1S1 gene. We solved the pathogenetic mechanism of MEDNIK syndrome, demonstrating that AP1S1 regulates intracellular copper machinery mediated by copper-pump proteins. This multisystem disease is characterized by a unique picture, combining clinical and biochemical signs of both Menkes and Wilsons diseases, in which liver copper overload is treatable by zinc acetate therapy, and can now be listed as a copper metabolism defect in humans. Our results may also contribute to understand the mechanism(s) of intracellular trafficking of copper pumps.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014
Robert Kopajtich; Thomas J. Nicholls; Joanna Rorbach; Metodi D. Metodiev; Peter Freisinger; Hanna Mandel; Arnaud Vanlander; Daniele Ghezzi; Rosalba Carrozzo; Robert W. Taylor; Klaus Marquard; Kei Murayama; Thomas Wieland; Thomas Schwarzmayr; Johannes A. Mayr; Sarah F. Pearce; Christopher A. Powell; Ann Saada; Akira Ohtake; Federica Invernizzi; Eleonora Lamantea; Ewen W. Sommerville; Angela Pyle; Patrick F. Chinnery; Ellen Crushell; Yasushi Okazaki; Masakazu Kohda; Yoshihito Kishita; Yoshimi Tokuzawa; Zahra Assouline
Respiratory chain deficiencies exhibit a wide variety of clinical phenotypes resulting from defective mitochondrial energy production through oxidative phosphorylation. These defects can be caused by either mutations in the mtDNA or mutations in nuclear genes coding for mitochondrial proteins. The underlying pathomechanisms can affect numerous pathways involved in mitochondrial physiology. By whole-exome and candidate gene sequencing, we identified 11 individuals from 9 families carrying compound heterozygous or homozygous mutations in GTPBP3, encoding the mitochondrial GTP-binding protein 3. Affected individuals from eight out of nine families presented with combined respiratory chain complex deficiencies in skeletal muscle. Mutations in GTPBP3 are associated with a severe mitochondrial translation defect, consistent with the predicted function of the protein in catalyzing the formation of 5-taurinomethyluridine (τm(5)U) in the anticodon wobble position of five mitochondrial tRNAs. All case subjects presented with lactic acidosis and nine developed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. In contrast to individuals with mutations in MTO1, the protein product of which is predicted to participate in the generation of the same modification, most individuals with GTPBP3 mutations developed neurological symptoms and MRI involvement of thalamus, putamen, and brainstem resembling Leigh syndrome. Our study of a mitochondrial translation disorder points toward the importance of posttranscriptional modification of mitochondrial tRNAs for proper mitochondrial function.
Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease | 2013
Denise Cassandrini; Maria Roberta Cilio; Marzia Bianchi; Mara Doimo; Martina Balestri; Alessandra Tessa; Teresa Rizza; Geppo Sartori; Maria Chiara Meschini; Claudia Nesti; Giulia Tozzi; Vittoria Petruzzella; Fiorella Piemonte; Luigi Bisceglia; Claudio Bruno; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Adele D’Amico; Fabiana Fattori; Rosalba Carrozzo; Leonardo Salviati; Filippo M. Santorelli; Enrico Bertini
Recessive mutations in the mitochondrial arginyl-transfer RNA synthetase (RARS2) gene have been associated with early onset encephalopathy with signs of oxidative phosphorylation defects classified as pontocerebellar hypoplasia 6. We describe clinical, neuroimaging and molecular features on five patients from three unrelated families who displayed mutations in RARS2. All patients rapidly developed a neonatal or early-infantile epileptic encephalopathy with intractable seizures. The long-term follow-up revealed a virtual absence of psychomotor development, progressive microcephaly, and feeding difficulties. Mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes in muscle and fibroblasts were normal in two. Blood and CSF lactate was abnormally elevated in all five patients at early stages while appearing only occasionally abnormal with the progression of the disease. Cerebellar vermis hypoplasia with normal aspect of the cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres appeared within the first months of life at brain MRI. In three patients follow-up neuroimaging revealed a progressive pontocerebellar and cerebral cortical atrophy. Molecular investigations of RARS2 disclosed the c.25A>G/p.I9V and the c.1586+3A>T in family A, the c.734G>A/p.R245Q and the c.1406G>A/p.R469H in family B, and the c.721T>A/p.W241R and c.35A>G/p.Q12R in family C. Functional complementation studies in Saccharomyces cerevisiae showed that mutation MSR1-R531H (equivalent to human p.R469H) abolished respiration whereas the MSR1-R306Q strain (corresponding to p.R245Q) displayed a reduced growth on non-fermentable YPG medium. Although mutations functionally disrupted yeast we found a relatively well preserved arginine aminoacylation of mitochondrial tRNA. Clinical and neuroimaging findings are important clues to raise suspicion and to reach diagnostic accuracy for RARS2 mutations considering that biochemical abnormalities may be absent in muscle biopsy.
Mitochondrion | 2009
Eva Morava; Ulrike Steuerwald; Rosalba Carrozzo; L.A.J. Kluijtmans; Frodi Joensen; René Santer; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Ron A. Wevers
Patients with SUCLA2 gene defects characteristically develop the trias of early hypotonia, progressive dystonia and sensori-neural deafness. We describe the clinical course and biochemical phenotype in 16 children from the Faroe Islands with a homozygous SUCLA2 splice site mutation. Elevated urinary 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid is a novel biochemical feature in patients. Progressive hearing loss, in combination with a characteristic metabolite profile (increased lactate, methylmalonic acid, C4-dicarboxylic carnitine, 3-hydroxyisovaleric acid) should lead the clinician to the correct diagnosis even in patients with only intermittent lactic acidemia. Direct SUCLA2 sequence analysis is suggested instead of an invasive muscle biopsy to obtain the diagnosis. Nutritional intervention may be considered in SUCLA2 patients.