| Literature DB >> 20440652 |
Abstract
Establishing a diagnosis in patients with a suspected mitochondrial disorder is often a challenge. Both knowledge of the clinical spectrum of mitochondrial disorders and the number of identified disease-causing molecular genetic defects are continuously expanding. The diagnostic examination of patients requires a multi-disciplinary clinical and laboratory evaluation in which the biochemical examination of the mitochondrial functional state often plays a central role. In most cases, a muscle biopsy provides the best opportunity to examine mitochondrial function. In addition to activity measurements of individual oxidative phosphorylation enzymes, analysis of mitochondrial respiration, substrate oxidation, and ATP production rates is performed to obtain a detailed picture of the mitochondrial energy-generating system. On the basis of the compilation of clinical, biochemical, and other laboratory test results, candidate genes are selected for molecular genetic testing. In patients in whom an unknown genetic variant is identified, a compatible biochemical phenotype is often required to firmly establish the diagnosis. In addition to the current role of the biochemical analysis in the diagnostic examination of patients with a suspected mitochondria disorder, this report gives a future perspective on the biochemical diagnosis in view of both the expanding genotypes of mitochondrial disorders and the possibilities for high throughput molecular genetic diagnosis.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20440652 PMCID: PMC3063578 DOI: 10.1007/s10545-010-9081-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis ISSN: 0141-8955 Impact factor: 4.982
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the mitochondrial energy generating system. Substrates are shuttled into mitochondria and are metabolized in the matrix in the TCA cycle, during which reduction equivalents NADH and FADH2 are formed. These are oxidized by complex I (CI) and II (CII) of the respiratory chain, and electrons coming from NADH and FADH2 are shuttled through complexes I or II, coenzyme Q, complex III (CIII), cytochrome c, and complex IV (CIV) to molecular oxygen. During the electron transport process, protons are pumped out of the mitochondrial matrix to the intermembrane space by complexes I, III, and IV. The electrochemical gradient thus formed is used by complex V (CV; F1/F0 ATPase) to convert ADP into ATP. The intramitochondrial ATP/ADP ratio is balanced by shuttling ADP and ATP in and out of the mitochondrial matrix by the adenosine nucleotide transporter ANT (not shown here). For diagnostic purposes, the mitochondrial energy generating system can be analyzed in several ways. By using 14C labeled pyruvate, malate, or succinate, the conversion rates of these substrates can be determined by measuring the amounts of released 14CO2 as parameters for the overall capacity of the mitochondrial energy-generating system (Janssen et al 2006). A similar parameter is the oxygen consumption rate in the presence of different substrates, e.g., pyruvate + malate, and which can be measured by respirometry or by fluorescent probes (Jonckheere et al 2010; Rustin et al 1994). The rate of synthesis of the end product ATP in the presence of different mitochondrial substrates is also representative for the capacity of the mitochondrial energy-generating system (Janssen et al 2006). In addition to these flux-parameters of the mitochondrial energy-generating system, individual enzymes can be determined by spectrophotometric and radiochemical assays
Overview of the assays currently in use in the Nijmegen Center for mitochondrial disorders
| Enzyme | Substrate | Assay conditions | Read-out |
|---|---|---|---|
| Complex I | 0.2 mmol/L NADH | 25 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.6 | 1 µmol/L rotenone-sensitive DCIP reduction at 600 nm |
| 70 µmol /L coenzyme Q1 | 0.35% BSA | ||
| 60 µmol/L DCIP | |||
| Complex II | 10 mmol/L succinate | 80 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.8 | 5 mmol/L malonate-sensitive DCIP reduction at 600 nm |
| 80 µmol/L decylubiquinone | 0.2 % BSA | ||
| 0.2 mmol/L ATP | |||
| 80 µmol/L DCIP | |||
| 2.0 mmol/L EDTA | |||
| 0.3 mmol/L sodium azide | |||
| Complex III | 300 µmol/L decylubiquinol | 50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.8 | Cytochrome c reduction at 550 nm |
| 50 µmol/L cytochrome c | 1.0 mmol/L EDTA | ||
| 3.0 mmol/L sodium azide | |||
| 0.04% Tween20 | |||
| Complex IV | 70 µmol/L reduced cytochrome c | 30 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.4 | Cytochrome c oxidation at 550 nm |
| Complex V | 3 mmol/L ATP | 25 mM phosphate buffer, pH 8.0 | 10 µmol/L oligomycin-sensitive NADH oxidation at 340 nm |
| 0.2 mmol/L EGTA | |||
| 5 mg/L Ap5A | |||
| 0.3% BSA | |||
| 250 mmol/L sucrose | |||
| 7.5 mmol/L MgCl2 | |||
| 50 mmol/L KCl | |||
| 0.1 mmol/L phosphoenolpyruvate | |||
| 2.5 U/ml lactate dehydrogenase | |||
| 1.5 U/ml pyruvate kinase |
The assays are performed at 37°C. The samples that are tested with these assays include isolated mitochondria from muscle and fibroblasts. In addition, more crude preparations from muscle, such as 10% homogenates in SETH-buffer (Janssen et al 2006), and the 600-g supernatants of these homogenates, are measured in this way. Extracts from heart, liver, brain, and chorionic villi are examined in a similar manner. These assays can be performed on any spectrophotometric device that has sufficient sensitivity.
Overview of the results of mitochondrial biochemical diagnostics in Nijmegen in the years 2005–2009
| Parameter | % reduced |
|---|---|
| ATP production | 39 |
| Complex I | 8 |
| Complex II | 2 |
| Complex III | 3 |
| Complex IV | 5 |
| Complex V | 1 |
| Combination of enzymes | 7 |
| ATP production (normal OXPHOS) | 13 |
The table gives the percentage of fresh muscle samples that showed an activity below the lowest control value. Results from frozen muscle samples are not included in this table. In total, 1,406 fresh muscle samples were examined in Nijmegen in 2005–2009. Of these, 39% showed a reduced rate of ATP production from the oxidation of pyruvate and malate. Approximately 2/3 of the samples with a reduced ATP production rate also showed a reduced activity of one or more OXPHOS enzymes. The remaining 1/3 showed normal OXPHOS enzyme activities. Approximately 5% of this latter group had a reduced PDHc activity. The figures presented here are similar to those reported in 2000, only in that case complex V and ATP production were not included (Loeffen et al. 2000). The reason for a reduced ATP production rate in the remaining 30% of the patients with normal OXPHOS and PDHc enzyme activities is either a secondary mitochondrial dysfunction or an unknown mitochondrial defect, such as enzymes and transporters for which a diagnostic assay is not (yet) available. The possibility of unknown defects is quite likely, given the total number of proteins/genes involved in mitochondrial energy metabolism and given the fact that new mitochondrial defects are still being discovered very regularly. This table should not be regarded as illustrative for the total group of patients with a suspected mitochondrial disorder, as not all patients have been tested for enzyme activities in muscle. Moreover, samples were received from many different hospitals in different countries, and the indications for doing a muscle biopsy are not the same in each hospital.