| Literature DB >> 22392506 |
Kamil S Sitarz1, Patrick F Chinnery, Patrick Yu-Wai-Man.
Abstract
Mitochondrial cytopathies are a heterogeneous group of human disorders triggered by disturbed mitochondrial function. This can be due to primary mitochondrial DNA mutations or nuclear defects affecting key components of the mitochondrial machinery. Optic neuropathy is a frequent disease manifestation and the degree of visual failure can be profound, with a severe impact on the patient's quality of life. This review focuses on the major mitochondrial disorders exhibiting optic nerve involvement, either as the defining clinical feature or as an additional component of a more extensive phenotype. Over the past decade, significant progress has been achieved in our basic understanding of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy and autosomal-dominant optic atrophy--the two classical paradigms for these mitochondrial optic neuropathies. There are currently limited treatments for these blinding ocular disorders and, ultimately, the aim is to translate these major advances into tangible benefits for patients and their families.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22392506 PMCID: PMC3342502 DOI: 10.1007/s11910-012-0260-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep ISSN: 1528-4042 Impact factor: 5.081
Figure 1Mitochondrial disease in the North of England. (Adapted from Yu-Wai-Man et al. [2] and Schaefer et al. [50])
mtDNA variants associated with LHON
| Mitochondrial gene | Nucleotide change | |
|---|---|---|
| Common variants (~ 90%) |
| m.3460 G > Aa |
|
| m.11778 G > Aa | |
|
| m.14484 T > Ca | |
| Rare variants (~ 10%) |
| m.3376 G > A, m.3635 G > Aa, m.3697 G > A, m.3700 G > A, m.3733 G > Aa, m.4025 C > T, m.4160 T > C, m.4171 C > Aa |
|
| m.4640 C > A, m.5244 G > A | |
|
| m.10237 T > C | |
|
| m.11696 G > A, m.11253 T > C | |
|
| m.10663 T > Ca | |
|
| m.12811 T > C, m.12848 C > T, m.13637 A > G, m.13730 G > A | |
|
| m.14325 T > C, m.14568 C > T, m.14459 G > Aa, m.14729 G > A, m.14482 C > Aa, m.14482 C > Ga, m.14495 A > Ga, m.14498 C > T, m.14568 C > Ta, m.14596 A > T | |
|
| m.9101 T > C | |
|
| m.9804 G > A | |
|
| m.14831 G > A |
Over 70% of LHON carriers harbor the m.11778 G > A mutation, but as a result of a founder event, the m.14484 T > C mutation has been identified in nearly 90% of all affected patients of French Canadian descent [3, 5]. In most laboratories worldwide, the diagnostic protocol involves screening for the three “primary” LHON mutations in the first instance. As full mitochondrial genome sequencing remains time consuming and expensive, this is only indicated if the initial LHON screen is negative and there is a strong clinical suspicion
aThese mtDNA variants are definitely pathogenic. They have been identified in two or more independent LHON pedigrees, showing segregation with affected disease status. The remaining putative LHON mutations have been found in singleton cases or in a single family, and additional evidence is required before pathogenicity can be irrefutably ascribed
LHON Leber hereditary optic neuropathy; mtDNA mitochondrial DNA
Nuclear mitochondrial disorders with prominent optic nerve involvement
| Inheritance | Locus | Gene | OMIM | Phenotypes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dominant | 1p36.2 |
| 601152 | Hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type 6 (HMSN-6, CMT2A) |
| 3q28–q29 |
| 165500 | Isolated optic atrophy and syndromal dominant optic atrophy (DOA+) | |
| 19q13.2–q13.3 |
| 165300 | Autosomal-dominant optic atrophy and early-onset cataracts (ADOAC) | |
| Recessive | 9q13–q21.1 |
| 229300 | Friedreich’s ataxia (FRDA) |
| 11q14.1–q21 |
| 612989 | Optic atrophy ± auditory neuropathy | |
| 16q24.3 |
| 607259 | Hereditary spastic paraplegia type 7 (HSP-7) | |
| 19q13.2–q13.3 |
| 258501 | Type III 3-methylglutaconic aciduria (Costeff syndrome) |
(Adapted from Yu-Wai-Man et al. [2, 5])