Literature DB >> 23714749

Clinical, biochemical, cellular and molecular characterization of mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome due to novel mutations in the MPV17 gene.

Johanna Uusimaa1, Julie Evans2, Conrad Smith2, Anna Butterworth3, Kate Craig3, Neil Ashley4, Chunyan Liao4, Janet Carver4, Alan Diot4, Lorna Macleod4, Iain Hargreaves5, Abdulrahman Al-Hussaini6, Eissa Faqeih6, Ali Asery6, Mohammed Al Balwi7, Wafaa Eyaid8, Areej Al-Sunaid8, Deirdre Kelly9, Indra van Mourik9, Sarah Ball10, Joanna Jarvis11, Arundhati Mulay12, Nedim Hadzic13, Marianne Samyn13, Alastair Baker13, Shamima Rahman14, Helen Stewart15, Andrew Am Morris16, Anneke Seller2, Carl Fratter2, Robert W Taylor3, Joanna Poulton4.   

Abstract

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion syndromes (MDS) are severe autosomal recessive disorders associated with decreased mtDNA copy number in clinically affected tissues. The hepatocerebral form (mtDNA depletion in liver and brain) has been associated with mutations in the POLG, PEO1 (Twinkle), DGUOK and MPV17 genes, the latter encoding a mitochondrial inner membrane protein of unknown function. The aims of this study were to clarify further the clinical, biochemical, cellular and molecular genetic features associated with MDS due to MPV17 gene mutations. We identified 12 pathogenic mutations in the MPV17 gene, of which 11 are novel, in 17 patients from 12 families. All patients manifested liver disease. Poor feeding, hypoglycaemia, raised serum lactate, hypotonia and faltering growth were common presenting features. mtDNA depletion in liver was demonstrated in all seven cases where liver tissue was available. Mosaic mtDNA depletion was found in primary fibroblasts by PicoGreen staining. These results confirm that MPV17 mutations are an important cause of hepatocerebral mtDNA depletion syndrome, and provide the first demonstration of mosaic mtDNA depletion in human MPV17 mutant fibroblast cultures. We found that a severe clinical phenotype was associated with profound tissue-specific mtDNA depletion in liver, and, in some cases, mosaic mtDNA depletion in fibroblasts.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23714749      PMCID: PMC3895632          DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2013.112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet        ISSN: 1018-4813            Impact factor:   4.246


INTRODUCTION

During the last decade, an increasing number of nuclear genetic defects have been identified causing mitochondrial dysfunction either through the accumulation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletions (multiple deletions) or through a reduction in mtDNA copy number causing mtDNA depletion syndromes (MDS), the latter of which are autosomal recessive diseases characterized by a severe, tissue-specific decrease of mtDNA copy number. At least 12 nuclear genes have been found to be involved in mtDNA maintenance, including POLG, POLG2, PEO1, SLC25A4, TYMP, DGUOK, TK2, SUCLA2, SUCLG1, MPV17, OPA1 and RRM2B genes.[1] MDS are caused by recessive defects in proteins directly involved in mtDNA replication or in proteins that affect the availability of deoxyribonucleoside triphosphates for mtDNA synthesis. Clinical presentations of MDS include early-onset hepatocerebral disease overlapping with Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome (henceforth ‘Alpers'), isolated myopathy, encephalomyopathy and mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy syndrome. MDS are classified as myopathic, encephalomyopathic or hepatocerebral forms, of which the latter group has been associated with mutations in POLG, PEO1 (Twinkle), DGUOK and MPV17 genes.[2] The human MPV17 gene is located on chromosome 2p21-23, comprising eight exons encoding 176 amino acids. It is expressed in human pancreas, kidney, muscle, liver, lung, placenta, brain and heart. MPV17 encodes a mitochondrial inner membrane protein, which has a so far largely unknown role in mtDNA maintenance. Human MPV17 is the orthologue of the mouse kidney disease gene, Mpv17. Loss of function has been shown to cause hepatocerebral MDS with oxidative phosphorylation failure and mtDNA depletion both in affected individuals and in Mpv17−/− mice.[3] To date, MDS caused by MPV17 mutations has been reported in 32 patients with the clinical manifestations including early progressive liver failure, neurological abnormalities, hypoglycaemia and raised blood lactate.[4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15] Recently, MPV17 mutations have also been associated with autosomal recessive adult-onset neuropathy and leukoencephalopathy with multiple mtDNA deletions in skeletal muscle.[16] Thus, as for POLG, RRM2B and TK2, MPV17 mutations can lead to recessive MDS or recessive multiple mtDNA deletion disorders. The aim of this study was to clarify further the clinical, biochemical, cellular and molecular features associated with MDS due to MPV17 gene mutations. We report 17 cases from 12 families with 11 novel MPV17 mutations. All the patients presented with early-onset liver disease but only some patients manifested neurological dysfunction. Furthermore, we demonstrate that primary fibroblast cultures from patients with MPV17 mutations may exhibit a mosaic mtDNA depletion.

SUBJECTS AND METHODS

We studied 70 unrelated probands with suspected hepatocerebral MDS who had been referred to Mitochondrial Diagnostic Centres at Oxford, Newcastle or London for clinical assessment, histological, biochemical and/or molecular genetic analyses. This study was approved and performed under the ethical guidelines issued by each institution for clinical studies, with written informed consent obtained for all subjects.

Molecular genetics

Total genomic DNA was isolated from blood leukocytes, skeletal muscle and liver samples by standard methods. Long-range PCR amplification of 13.8 kb mtDNA was undertaken to screen for mtDNA deletions in the available muscle and liver DNA samples, using primers previously described.[17] mtDNA copy number relative to nDNA levels in muscle and/or liver DNA was estimated and compared with age-matched normal controls[18, 19] by real-time quantitative PCR as described previously,[20] except the nuclear probe was labelled with Vic at the 5′ end and the assays were carried out simultaneously using a PE7500 real-time PCR instrument (Applied Biosystems, Life Technologies, Carlsbad, CA, USA). mtDNA copy number <30% compared with age-matched controls was classed as mtDNA depletion, 30–50% as borderline low, and >50% as normal. The entire coding and flanking intronic regions of MPV17 were amplified by PCR from genomic DNA and sequenced by fluorescent dideoxy sequencing (Applied Biosystems Big Dye Terminator v3.1 kit) and capillary electrophoresis (Applied Biosystems 3730). Results were compared with Genbank reference sequences NM_002437.4 and NG_008075.1, and mutations described in accordance with HGVS nomenclature guidelines. MPV17 exon copy number (exons 1–8) was assessed by MLPA (kit P089-A1; MRC-Holland, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) in patients 16 and 17 (family 12) to confirm the deletion of multiple exons. Where available, parental blood DNA samples were analysed for the familial mutation(s) by sequencing of the appropriate exon, or by MLPA for family 12.

Muscle histology, histochemistry and biochemistry

Tissue samples from muscle and liver were obtained according to standard procedures. Muscle and liver histology and histochemistry were performed by standard methods. The activities of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzyme complexes were determined from skeletal muscle and liver biopsy samples and cultured skin fibroblasts, as previously described.[21, 22]

Characterization of the cellular mtDNA depletion phenotype by PicoGreen staining of fibroblasts

Cell cultures were analysed using the fluorescent stains PicoGreen (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR, USA) (dsDNA intercalator) and tetramethylrhodamine methylester (TMRM; reflects mitochondrial membrane potential). Staining with PicoGreen is a simple, semi-quantitative method for visualizing mtDNA in situ within living cells as described.[23] mtDNA nucleoids were further quantified using the IN Cell 1000 analyser (GE Healthcare Life Science, Little Chalfont, UK). Control and patients' fibroblasts were stained with PicoGreen and 30 nℳ TMRM as above in clear Optimem media (Gibco, Life Technologies). Raw images were acquired and binarized to quantify mtDNA nucleoids per cell. Nucleoids were defined as PicoGreen punctae present in the cytoplasm and colocalizing with mitochondria.

RESULTS

Analysis of the MPV17 gene

We identified pathogenic mutations in the MPV17 gene in 12 out of 70 probands screened representing 17% of our undiagnosed cohort of children with suspected hepatocerebral MDS. Ten probands harboured homozygous mutations, and two had compound heterozygous mutations. A familial homozygous mutation was also identified in further affected siblings from families 4, 5, 9 and 12, resulting in a total of 17 patients from 12 families (Table 1). Eleven of the 12 mutations we identified are previously unpublished, and as such considered to be novel: c.62T>G (p.Leu21Arg), c.67G>C (p.Ala23Pro), c.107A>C (p.Gln36Pro), c.121C>T (p.Arg41Trp), c.130C>T (p.Gln44*), c.135delA (p.Glu45Aspfs*8), c.191C>G (p.Pro64Arg), c.278A>C (p.Gln93Pro), c.279+1G>T, c.461+1G>C and a deletion including exons 3–8 of MPV17 (Figures 1 and 2).
Table 1

Clinical, biochemical, cellular and molecular findings in 17 patients with MPV17 mutations

FamilyPatient, sexConsanguinity (family history)Clinical informationAge at onsetAge at referralDeceased/alive, age at death/current ageMPV17 mutationsmtDNA copy number in livermtDNA copy number in musclePicoGreen analysis of fibroblastsMuscle/liver histologyMuscle/liver/fibroblasts respiratory chain activities or histochemistry
11, FY (N)Hypotonia, progressive liver disease, coagulopathy, hypoglycaemia, developmental delay, raised blood lactate4.5 mo5 moDecd, 6.5 moc.62T>G (p.Leu21Arg) homNDNDNDNDND
22, FN (N)Poor feeding, FG, progressive liver disease, hypoglycaemia, raised blood lactate, delayed development, vomitingBirth2 moDecd, 12 moc.67G>C (p.Ala23Pro) & c.135delA (p.Glu45Aspfs*8)14%51%NormalMus: Normal; Liv: micro-and macro-vesicular change in most hepatocytes, fibrosis, inflammationMus: Normal; Liv: CIV↓
33, FY (Ya)IUGR, feeding problems, hypoglycaemia, raised tyrosine within days of birth, raised blood lactate, FG, hypotonia, progressive liver failure, encephalopathyBirth2 moDecd, 4 moc.107A>C (p.Gln36Pro) hom5%100%Mosaic depletionLiv: severe panlobular loss of hepatocytes and stromal collapseMus: Normal; Fib: Normal
44, FY (Y, sibs P5 & P6)Progressive neurological deterioration with peripheral neuropathy, progressive liver disease5 yr5 yrAlive, 8.5 yrc.121C>T (p.Arg41Trp) hom40%46%Normal/minor changesMus: Normal; Liv: microvesicular steatosis and focal fibrosisMus: Normal; Liv: Normal
 5, FY (Y, sibs P4 & P6)Progressive liver failure, FG, corneal scarring , progressive neurological deteriorationBirth9 moDecd, 4 yr 3 moc.121C>T (p.Arg41Trp) homND38%N.D.Mus: Normal Liv: cirrhosisND
 6, MY (Y, sibs P4 & P5)Progressive liver failure, encephalopathy, liver transplant at 15 mo, died 15 mo later following neurological and renal deterioration.Birth9 moDecd, 2 yr 6 moNDNDNDNDLiv: Giant cell hepatitis, haemorrhagic necrosis, focal fatty changeND
57, MY (Yb, sib P8)Poor feeding, hypoglycaemia, FG, raised blood lactate, encephalopathy, progressive liver failure3.5 mo3.5 moDecd, 4 moc.130C>T (p.Gln44*) homNDNDNDMus: Fatty infiltration; Liv: fatty infiltrationMus: CI ↓, CII+III ↓, CIV ↓
 8, FY (Yb, sib P7)Tachypnoea, hypoglycaemia, raised blood lactate within days of birth, poor weight gain, progressive liver failureBirthBirthDecd, 7.5 moc.130C>T (p.Gln44*) homNDNDNormal/minor changesNDND
69, MN (N)FG, liver disease, liver transplant at 3 yr, progressive demyelinating peripheral neuropathy, hypoparathyroidism, severe growth hormone deficiency, gastrostomy5 mo5 moAlive, 11.5 yrc.191C>G (p.Pro64Arg) & c.293C>T (p.Pro98Leu)21%80%NormalMus: minor fatty changes; Liv: steatosis, abundant mitochondria with mild pleomorphismMus: CI ↓, CIV↓ Liv: CIV ↓
710, MY (N)Neonatal jaundice, FG, hypotonia, microcephaly, progressive liver disease, raised blood lactate, retinal pigmentation2 mo2 moDecd, 5 moc.278A>C (p.Gln93Pro) homNDNDNDLiv: distension of hepatocytes, few periportal glycogen nuclei, fibrosis, microvesicular steatosis and portal inflammation.ND
811, FY (Yc)Poor feeding, mild hypotonia, jaundice, liver dysfunction, coagulopathy, raised blood lactate2 mo3.5 moDecd, <16 moc.278A>C (p.Gln93Pro) hom11%NDMosaic depletionLiv: cholestasis with scattered giant cell hepatocytes and extensive portal - portal bridging fibrosisND
912, FY (Y, sib P13)Poor feeding, FG, hypotonia, subtle facial dysmorphism, hypoglycaemia, cholestatic jaundice, central hypocortisolism, progressive liver disease2 mo5 moDecd, 8 moc.278A>C (p.Gln93Pro) homND10%NDNDMus: CI ↓, CIII ↓, CIV ↓
 13, FY (Y, sib P12)Neonatal jaundice, FG, hypotonia, recurrent vomiting, progressive liver disease, raised blood lactate, retinal pigmentationBirth5 moAlive, 6 moc.278A>C (p.Gln93Pro) homNDNDNDLiv: large droplet steatosis and microsteatosis, mild iron deposition in Kupffer cellsND
1014, MY (Yd)FG, dev delay, hypotonia, myopathy, liver disease, cholestasis; raised blood lactate4 mo5 moAlive, 14 moc.279+1G>T hom5%NDNDLiv: micro- and macro-vesicular steatosis with canalicular cholestasis, portal fibrosis and septae formationND
1115, FY (N)Conjugated jaundice, hypothyroidism, hypotonia, FG, developmental delay and dysmorphism2.5 mo13 moDecd, 3 yrc.461+1G>C homND25%Mosaic depletionLiv: Patchy hepatocellular oncocytosis and single-cell necrosisMus: CI ↓, CII+III ↓, CIV ↓
1216, MY (N)Poor weight gain, hypoglycaemia, FG, hypotonia, subtle dysmorphic features, progressive liver failure, encephalomyopathy2 mo3 moDecd, 4 moDel exons 3–8 hom14%17%NDMus: Generalized fibre atrophy, small angular fibres; Liv: cholestasis and steatosisND
 17, FY(Y, sib P16)Raised γGT at 6 weeks, progressive liver failure from 4 mo with rapid deteriorationBirthBirthAlive, 5 moDel exons 3-8 homNDNDMosaic depletionNDND

Abbreviations: CI, CII, CIII, CIV, mitochondrial respiratory chain enzyme complexes I, II, III and IV, respectively; Decd, deceased; F, female; FG, faltering growth; Fib, fibroblasts; γGT, gamma–glutamyltransferase; IUGR, intrauterine growth retardation; Liv, liver; M, male; mo, months; Mus, muscle; N, no; ND, not determined; Y, yes; yr, years.

Two relatives died in infancy due to liver disease (the mother's sister's two children whose parents were also consanguineous).

Liver disease in two family members, two premature deaths in infancy of two other family members.

Two cousins died with liver disease.

Two previous siblings died in infancy with similar presentation.

Figure 1

Mutations in the MPV17 gene. Schematic representation of the MPV17 gene, comprising eight exons of which exons 2–8 are coding (coding region coloured in orange); the positions of the 4 α-helical transmembrane spanning domains are indicated by red bars; missense/inframe deletion mutations are shown above the schematic and truncating/splicing mutations are shown below the schematic; novel mutations are indicated in blue, previously reported mutations also identified in this study in green and previously reported mutations not identified in this study in black.

Figure 2

Location of missense mutations in the MPV17 protein. Schematic representation of the MPV17 protein, which is localized to the inner mitochondrial membrane; the 4 α-helical transmembrane spanning domains are indicated by red rectangles, and the number of the first and last amino acids of each of these domains is annotated in white; novel missense mutations are indicated in blue, previously reported missense mutations also identified in this study in green and previously reported missense/inframe deletion mutations not identified in this study in grey.

Five of the 11 novel mutations are predicted to be protein truncating: c.279+1G>T and c.461+1G>C alter a consensus splice site; c.130C>T is a nonsense mutation (p.Gln44*); c.135delA results in a frameshift (p.Glu45Aspfs*8) and one mutation is a large deletion of exons 3–8. The remaining six novel mutations are missense changes, which are scattered throughout the protein (Figure 2), and alter amino acids, which are highly conserved across vertebrates (Supplementary Figure 1). Homozygosity for the MPV17 mutation in patients from families 1, 3–5, 7–10 and 12 was confirmed by parental testing, which demonstrated all parents to be heterozygous carriers. Parental samples were not available for family 11. For patients 2 (family 2) and 9 (family 6), at least one parent was found to be a heterozygous carrier in each case, thereby confirming compound heterozygosity.

Molecular genetic studies on mtDNA from muscle and tissue samples

Molecular genetic analyses did not reveal any significant large-scale mtDNA rearrangements in any of the available muscle or liver DNA samples. mtDNA copy number was compared as previously[18, 19] with controls matched for age but not ethnicity. Severe mtDNA depletion in liver was demonstrated for five out of seven cases (5–14% of control mtDNA) where liver tissue was available (patients 2, 3, 11, 14 and 16). Patient 9 had clear but less severe mtDNA depletion in liver (21% of controls), whereas mtDNA copy number was borderline low (40% of controls) in the remaining case (patient 4). Mean mtDNA copy number of all seven cases was 16%. In contrast, mtDNA copy number was highly variable across the six cases where muscle tissue was available (10–100% of controls, mean 46% Table 1).

Clinical and laboratory features of patients with MPV17 mutations

The 17 individuals in our cohort came from 12 families, 6 being male and 11 female, from different ethnic populations including Asian, Middle-Eastern and Caucasian families. All patients manifested with liver disease with abnormal liver function tests. Poor feeding, hypoglycaemia, raised plasma lactate, hypotonia and faltering growth were common preliminary features. In four cases, the growth failure was attributed to poor feeding, two poor weight gain in the presence of adequate food intake and one growth failure. Detailed clinical summaries for each patient are provided in Supplementary File 1. Laboratory findings revealed hypoglycaemia, and patients with liver impairment had raised plasma levels of bilirubin, transaminases, GGT, ferritin, alpha fetoprotein and coagulopathy. Plasma lactate levels that were initially raised (ranging from 3 mmol/l to 21.4 mmol/l; normal range 0.7–2.1 mmol/l) usually decreased, corresponding to an obvious clinical improvement. CSF lactate values varied from normal to 5.1 mmol/l (normal range 1.1–2.2 mmol/l). Five of the 17 patients had at least one normal blood lactate or one normal CSF lactate. Plasma amino acids were increased including methionine, tyrosine and arginine (15-fold and 10-fold above the upper limit of the normal range, respectively), and a 2–3-fold increase of glutamine, alanine, serine, glycine or threonine. Age at presentation ranged from birth to 5 years. Five patients (4, 9, 13, 14 and 17) have survived with current ages varying from 5 months to 11.5 years (mean age 4.4 years). The median age at death was 13 months (range from 3 months to 4.3 years). Two patients (6 and 9) underwent liver transplantation. Patient 6 received a liver transplant at the age of 9 months, but died due to neurological and renal manifestations at the age of 2.5 years. Conversely, patient 9 received a liver transplant at the age of 3 years and is currently 11.5 years old manifesting with progressive demyelinating peripheral neuropathy, hypoparathyroidism and severe growth hormone deficiency. Where studied, liver ultrasound showed an enlarged echogenic liver (patients 1, 7 and 12), a distended gall bladder with biliary sludge (patients 1 and 8), nodular/heterogeneous liver parenchyma (patients 4, 5 and 8) and ascites in the abdomen and pelvis (patients 5 and 12). Brain MRI scans revealed global cerebral and cerebellar atrophy (patient 6), brain infarction (patients 6 and 7) and white matter changes consistent with metabolic leucodystrophy in five patients (patients 1, 4, 5, 6 and 10) from our cohort. Neuropathy was a feature of family 4, with corneal scarring likely due to sensory deficit, as described in Navajo familial neurogenic arthropathy.24

Histopathological features

The histological assessment of a diagnostic muscle biopsy was performed in six patients. Histopathological changes varied from normal findings (patients 2, 4 and 5) to fatty infiltration (patients 7 and 9), to a generalized fibre atrophy with small angular fibres (patient 16). Liver histology was available from 13 of the 17 patients. Histopathological features included: fatty infiltration (patients 2, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10, 13, 14 and 16), fibrosis/cirrhosis (patients 2, 4, 5, 10 and 14), severe panlobular loss of hepatocytes and stromal collapse (patient 3), giant cell hepatitis with haemorrhagic necrosis (patient 6), non-specific changes (patient 11), cholestasis (patients 14 and 16), patchy hepatocellular oncocytosis and single-cell necrosis (patient 15), abundant mitochondria with mild pleomorphism (patient 9), marked distension of hepatocytes and few periportal glycogen deposits (patient 10) and mild iron deposition in Kupffer cells (patient 13).

Biochemical and histochemical analyses

Table 1 Muscle tissue, liver tissue and/or skin fibroblasts were available for the assessment of mitochondrial respiratory chain function from 7 out of 12 probands. Respiratory chain analysis in muscle at or soon after initial clinical presentation suggested a combined deficiency of respiratory chain complex activities in four patients (7, 9, 10 and 15), whereas the enzyme activities were normal in muscle samples from patients 2, 3 and 4 as well as in liver from patient 4 (who had the highest mtDNA copy number) and fibroblasts from patient 3. Unfortunately, biochemical analyses of liver from patients 3, 11 and 15 with mosaic mtDNA depletion in fibroblasts were not available. Sequential COX-SDH histochemistry revealed a severe, near-global COX deficiency in the liver from patient 2. Initial muscle histology at the age of 28 months from patient 9 was within normal limits, concurrent respiratory enzyme assays showing a borderline complex I deficiency. A repeat muscle biopsy from patient 9 at 3 years revealed slightly decreased respiratory chain activities of both complex I and complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase; 82% of control values). Complex IV activity was 27% of control in the explanted liver tissue. These findings are also summarized in Table 1. Fibroblast cultures were available from 8 of the 17 patients in our cohort. mtDNA was visualized in these cultures using PicoGreen fluorescence microscopy and the membrane potential-dependent mitochondrial probe, TMRM. PicoGreen staining provides a quantitative measure of mtDNA content in a cell, and is more sensitive to small localized depletion than real-time PCR. mtDNA is arranged into punctate DNA/protein structures, termed nucleoids in vivo, consisting of several mtDNA genomes complexed to nucleoid proteins. Mosaic mtDNA depletion was clearly observed in fibroblasts from four MPV17 patients (patients 3, 11, 15 and 17; Figures 3c and e and Supplementary Information 2). In two patients, intermediate mtDNA depletion was observed with fibroblast mtDNA staining being generally paler (patients 4 and 8) whereas PicoGreen staining was normal in fibroblasts from patients 2 and 9. Cells showing the most marked mtDNA depletion exhibited a decreased mitochondrial membrane potential following TMRM staining. This was reflected by real-time PCR (Supplementary Information 2), which showed that the average mtDNA copy number in the cell lines with mosaic depletion was 70% (range 35–100%) of expected compared with 89% (range 43–150%) in the other patient lines (four controls, mean 100%, range 70–136%). Real-time PCR was supported by quantitation of nucleoid numbers using IN Cell 1000 analyser (Supplementary Information 2).
Figure 3

PicoGreen staining of fibroblast cultures. Healthy control fibroblasts exhibit typical bright punctate nucleoid staining when stained with the fluorescent DNA dye PicoGreen (a). Co-staining these cells with the potential sensitive mitochondrial stain, TMRM demonstrated a normal polarized mitochondrial network in all cells (b). Fibroblasts from patient 3 mostly exhibit typical bright nucleoids staining, but some cells (arrow) lack puncta (green in on-line version) because they are depleted of mtDNA, termed mosaic mtDNA depletion (c). Co-staining of these cells with TMRM demonstrates that some of the mtDNA-depleted cells have a depolarized mitochondrial network (d). Fibroblasts grown from patient 17 umbilical cord also show mosaic mtDNA depletion (e), most cells having normal TMRM signal (f) but one depolarized cell is shown (arrow) consistent with mosaic mtDNA depletion. Scale bars=50 μm.

DISCUSSION

We have performed clinical, biochemical, immunocytochemical and molecular genetic studies of 17 patients with MDS associated with MPV17 mutations, demonstrating a loose relationship between the clinical phenotype and mutational genotype, with patients with the most severe mtDNA depletion in liver tending to present and die at an earlier age. We have also demonstrated a mosaic mtDNA depletion in fibroblasts from some of the more severely affected patients. Previously, MPV17 mutations have been reported in 32 patients with the hepatocerebral form of MDS in which the most common clinical manifestations included early progressive liver failure, hypoglycaemia and raised plasma lactate concentrations.[4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15] Some of these patients manifested with neuromuscular abnormalities including hypotonia, nystagmus, encephalopathy, developmental delay/mental retardation, microcephaly, seizures, myoclonus, myopathy, ataxia and/or peripheral neuropathy (Navajo neurohepatopathy). White matter changes and abnormalities within the reticular formation of the lower brain stem and within the reticulospinal tracts at the cervicocranial junction on MR imaging have been reported.[13, 15]

Clinical findings and differential diagnoses

All our 17 patients presented with liver disease; other common features included raised serum lactate concentrations, hypotonia and faltering growth. Rarer features included endocrine abnormalities (hypoparathyroidism in patient 9, pituitary dysfunction in patient 12 and hypothyroidism in patient 15), retinal pigmentation (patients 10 and 13), corneal scarring[24] (patient 5) and progressive demyelinating peripheral neuropathy (patients 4 and 9).[7, 11] In addition, three patients were found with minor dysmorphic features (patients 12, 15 and 16), which have not been described previously. Thus, the clinical findings in our cohort of MDS patients with MPV17 mutations are broadly similar to those previously reported. The infantile phenotypes of hepatocerebral forms of MDS associated with mutations in POLG, PEO1 (Twinkle), DGUOK or MPV17 have similarities, presenting with liver failure along with various neurological and endocrinological manifestations. Significant hypoglycaemia, that is glucose levels that are more difficult to maintain with oral supplementation than would be expected from the degree of liver failure, was commonly present in patients with MPV17 mutations as previously reported.[4] We also observed raised levels of tyrosine in blood and/or urine in three patients, as can occur in patients with DGUOK mutations.[24] We have also noted a tendency for the liver failure to precede severe neurological problems, whereas in our experience the sequence tends to be the other way round in patients with classical Alpers syndrome due to POLG mutations: in only 1 out of 24 of our series did liver dysfunction clearly precede neurological involvement.[20] For this reason, patient 6 underwent a liver transplant at 15 months of age, but died 15 months later, following neurological and renal deterioration. In summary, presentations of patients with MPV17 mutations were most like those of patients with DGUOK-associated MDS, who typically have neonatal liver failure and hypotonia.[25]

MPV17 mutations

Twelve different mutations were identified in our cohort of 17 patients (12 probands), including 11 novel mutations (6 missense, 5 truncating) in the MPV17 gene (Figure 1). This adds significantly to the 21 previously reported mutations.[4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16] The seven missense mutations (six novel and one previously reported) identified in our cohort are scattered throughout the protein (Figure 2), with no significant clustering. This is in contrast to El-Hattab et al,[11] who reported clustering of missense mutations in the region of the putative protein kinase C phosphorylation site. The majority of patients in our cohort presented in the first few weeks of life and died before 2 years of age (although three patients currently aged 5–14 months are living and so their clinical course cannot be predicted), and these patients had either truncating or missense mutations in MPV17 that presumably led to complete loss of functional protein. However, patients from families 4 and 6 (patients 4, 5, 6 and 9) appear to have a milder disease with better prognosis. These patients are/were either homozygous or compound heterozygous for missense mutations, namely p.Arg41Trp, p.Pro64Arg and p.Pro98Leu, suggesting that these mutant MPV17 proteins retain some residual function. This is similar to the findings of Karadimas et al,[5] who reported patients homozygous for p.Arg50Gln or compound heterozygous for p.Gly94Arg and p.Pro98Leu, with a relatively mild form of hepatocerebral MDS, namely Navajo neurohepatopathy. It is interesting to note that both p.Arg41Trp and p.Arg50Gln are located in the same protein loop in the intermembrane space (Figure 2). As a result of identifying pathogenic MPV17 mutations, prenatal diagnosis and/or preimplantation genetic diagnosis is now available to these 12 families. Indeed, the parents of patient 16 opted to have amniocentesis and MPV17 analysis in two subsequent pregnancies, who were accurately identified as an unaffected carrier and an affected girl (patient 17).

Mitochondrial respiratory chain analyses and mtDNA depletion in tissue samples

Respiratory chain deficiency and mtDNA depletion are usually present in the muscle of MDS patients, but not in all patients. In cases with isolated liver involvement, respiratory chain enzyme activity and mtDNA copy number have been normal in muscle and decreased only in liver tissue. For example, many patients with autosomal recessive mutations in the POLG gene causing Alpers syndrome (intractable epilepsy, hepatopathy) have normal respiratory chain enzyme activity and mtDNA copy number in skeletal muscle.[20, 26] The characterization of tissues from previously described patients with MPV17 mutations has revealed a severe mtDNA depletion that was most pronounced in liver, followed by a less severe, but still significant depletion in skeletal muscle.[6, 15] In our cohort, respiratory chain analysis in muscle revealed a combined deficiency of respiratory chain complexes in four out of seven muscle biopsy samples available for biochemical studies, and mtDNA depletion was identified in three out of eight muscle samples with borderline low copy number in two samples. Therefore, muscle from three out of eight patients showed no evidence of mtDNA depletion. Interestingly, there was no clear correlation between the level of mtDNA depletion in muscle, disease severity or mutation location. As predicted, respiratory chain enzyme activities and mtDNA copy number in liver tissue correlated more closely with disease severity. Liver was available for mtDNA copy number analysis in seven patients. Severe mtDNA depletion in liver (<20% compared with age-matched controls) was associated with early onset and severe disease course (Table 1). In addition, when measured in both tissues (five patients), the mtDNA content was significantly less in the liver than in the muscle (P=0.04, one-tailed paired sample T-test). Both of these features are also apparent in patients with Alpers syndrome due to POLG mutations.[20] Although liver respiratory chain enzyme activities or histochemistry were only available for three patients, this also showed some correlation with disease severity, as the only sample with normal activity was from patient 4 with the mildest disease.

PicoGreen stainings of fibroblasts

We identified mosaic mtDNA depletion in fibroblasts by PicoGreen staining in three cases (patients 3, 11 and 15) with an early-onset liver disease (birth–2.5 months), two of whom had severe mtDNA depletion in liver (5% in patient 3 and 11% in patient 11); fibroblasts grown from the umbilical cord of patient 17 (now 5 months old and deteriorating rapidly with liver failure, and whose older sibling, patient 16, was severely affected and had severe liver mtDNA depletion) also showed mosaic mtDNA depletion. In four other patients (2, 4, 8 and 9) from whom fibroblasts were available, there was no clear evidence of mosaic mtDNA depletion even after extensive passaging, and these patients had more variable onset (birth–5 years) and mtDNA copy number in liver (14–40% of controls). Muscle mtDNA copy number was highly variable both in patients with mosaic mtDNA depletion (25–100% of controls) and in patients without mosaic mtDNA depletion (46–80% of controls). Thus, mosaic mtDNA depletion was more apparent in patients with severe clinical phenotype and low mtDNA content in liver, but did not appear to correlate with muscle mtDNA content. A similar association between the cellular phenotype and severity of the clinical phenotype has previously been seen in patients with the most severe POLG mutations.[20, 23] Mosaic mtDNA depletion has also been detected in serum-deprived mouse embryonic fibroblasts lacking MPV17 protein, using antiDNA antibodies,[3] but has not previously been observed in patients with MPV17 mutations. Finding mosaic depletion in fibroblasts, post mortem may provide a useful clue to aetiology in cases where fibroblasts are the only material available for diagnosis.[27]

CONCLUSION

Our data confirm previous reports describing MPV17 mutations as an important cause of mtDNA maintenance disorders, specifically hepatocerebral MDS. We describe 17 patients with 11 novel MPV17 mutations and provide the first description of recessive MPV17 mutations associated with mosaic mtDNA depletion in fibroblasts. We present evidence that MPV17 mutations lead to tissue selective impairment of mtDNA replication and to a mosaic defect pattern in fibroblasts, which is associated at least in some patients with the severity of clinical phenotype.
  26 in total

Review 1.  Biochemical assays of respiratory chain complex activity.

Authors:  Denise M Kirby; David R Thorburn; Douglass M Turnbull; Robert W Taylor
Journal:  Methods Cell Biol       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 1.441

Review 2.  Inherited mitochondrial diseases of DNA replication.

Authors:  William C Copeland
Journal:  Annu Rev Med       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 13.739

3.  MPV17-associated hepatocerebral mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome: new patients and novel mutations.

Authors:  Ayman W El-Hattab; Fang-Yuan Li; Eric Schmitt; Shulin Zhang; William J Craigen; Lee-Jun C Wong
Journal:  Mol Genet Metab       Date:  2009-10-13       Impact factor: 4.797

4.  MR imaging findings in the reticular formation in siblings with MPV17-related mitochondrial depletion syndrome.

Authors:  A N Merkle; D R Nascene; A M McKinney
Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol       Date:  2011-04-21       Impact factor: 3.825

5.  Whole mitochondrial genome amplification reveals basal level multiple deletions in mtDNA of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Y Y Li; C Hengstenberg; B Maisch
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  1995-05-05       Impact factor: 3.575

6.  Clinical and molecular features of mitochondrial DNA depletion due to mutations in deoxyguanosine kinase.

Authors:  D P Dimmock; Q Zhang; C Dionisi-Vici; R Carrozzo; J Shieh; L-Y Tang; C Truong; E Schmitt; M Sifry-Platt; S Lucioli; F M Santorelli; C H Ficicioglu; M Rodriguez; K Wierenga; G M Enns; N Longo; M H Lipson; H Vallance; W J Craigen; F Scaglia; L-J Wong
Journal:  Hum Mutat       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 4.878

7.  Hepatocerebral form of mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome: novel MPV17 mutations.

Authors:  Antonella Spinazzola; René Santer; Orhan H Akman; Kostas Tsiakas; Hansjoerg Schaefer; Xiaoqi Ding; Charalampos L Karadimas; Sara Shanske; Jaya Ganesh; Salvatore Di Mauro; Massimo Zeviani
Journal:  Arch Neurol       Date:  2008-08

8.  Clinical and molecular features of mitochondrial DNA depletion syndromes.

Authors:  A Spinazzola; F Invernizzi; F Carrara; E Lamantea; A Donati; M Dirocco; I Giordano; M Meznaric-Petrusa; E Baruffini; I Ferrero; M Zeviani
Journal:  J Inherit Metab Dis       Date:  2008-12-27       Impact factor: 4.982

9.  Variation in mitochondrial DNA levels in muscle from normal controls. Is depletion of mtDNA in patients with mitochondrial myopathy a distinct clinical syndrome.

Authors:  J Poulton; C Sewry; C G Potter; T Bougeron; D Chretien; F A Wijburg; K J Morten; G Brown
Journal:  J Inherit Metab Dis       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 4.982

10.  MPV17 encodes an inner mitochondrial membrane protein and is mutated in infantile hepatic mitochondrial DNA depletion.

Authors:  Antonella Spinazzola; Carlo Viscomi; Erika Fernandez-Vizarra; Franco Carrara; Pio D'Adamo; Sarah Calvo; René Massimiliano Marsano; Claudia Donnini; Hans Weiher; Pietro Strisciuglio; Rossella Parini; Emmanuelle Sarzi; Alicia Chan; Salvatore DiMauro; Agnes Rötig; Paolo Gasparini; Iliana Ferrero; Vamsi K Mootha; Valeria Tiranti; Massimo Zeviani
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2006-04-02       Impact factor: 38.330

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  22 in total

Review 1.  The emergence of the mitochondrial genome as a partial regulator of nuclear function is providing new insights into the genetic mechanisms underlying age-related complex disease.

Authors:  Martin P Horan; David N Cooper
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  2013-12-04       Impact factor: 4.132

2.  Mitochondrial DNA Depletion and Deletions in Paediatric Patients with Neuromuscular Diseases: Novel Phenotypes.

Authors:  Tuomas Komulainen; Milla-Riikka Hautakangas; Reetta Hinttala; Salla Pakanen; Vesa Vähäsarja; Petri Lehenkari; Päivi Olsen; Päivi Vieira; Outi Saarenpää-Heikkilä; Johanna Palmio; Hannu Tuominen; Pietari Kinnunen; Kari Majamaa; Heikki Rantala; Johanna Uusimaa
Journal:  JIMD Rep       Date:  2015-05-05

3.  The Human Mitochondrial DNA Depletion Syndrome Gene MPV17 Encodes a Non-selective Channel That Modulates Membrane Potential.

Authors:  Vasily D Antonenkov; Antti Isomursu; Daniela Mennerich; Miia H Vapola; Hans Weiher; Thomas Kietzmann; J Kalervo Hiltunen
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2015-04-10       Impact factor: 5.157

Review 4.  Mitochondrial genome changes and neurodegenerative diseases.

Authors:  Milena Pinto; Carlos T Moraes
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2013-11-16

5.  Abnormalities in glycogen metabolism in a patient with alpers' syndrome presenting with hypoglycemia.

Authors:  Mariella Simon; Richard C Chang; Deeksha S Bali; Lee-Jun Wong; Ying Peng; Jose E Abdenur
Journal:  JIMD Rep       Date:  2013-11-23

6.  A novel homozygous MPV17 mutation in two families with axonal sensorimotor polyneuropathy.

Authors:  Yu-Ri Choi; Young Bin Hong; Sung-Chul Jung; Ja Hyun Lee; Ye Jin Kim; Hyung Jun Park; Jinho Lee; Heasoo Koo; Ji-Su Lee; Dong Hwan Jwa; Namhee Jung; So-Youn Woo; Sang-Beom Kim; Ki Wha Chung; Byung-Ok Choi
Journal:  BMC Neurol       Date:  2015-10-05       Impact factor: 2.474

7.  Three Nonsynonymous Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in the RhitH Gene Cause Reduction of the Repression Activity That Leads to Upregulation of M-LPH, a Participant in Mitochondrial Function.

Authors:  Reiko Iida; Misuzu Ueki; Junko Fujihara; Haruo Takeshita; Kaori Kimura-Kataoka; Toshihiro Yasuda
Journal:  Biores Open Access       Date:  2013-12-01

8.  A monoclonal antibody raised against bacterially expressed MPV17 sequences shows peroxisomal, endosomal and lysosomal localisation in U2OS cells.

Authors:  Hans Weiher; Haymo Pircher; Pidder Jansen-Dürr; Silke Hegenbarth; Percy Knolle; Silke Grunau; Miia Vapola; J Kalervo Hiltunen; Ralf M Zwacka; Elmon Schmelzer; Kerstin Reumann; Hans Will
Journal:  BMC Res Notes       Date:  2016-02-27

9.  Canine MPV17 truncation without clinical manifestations.

Authors:  Reetta L Hänninen; Saija Ahonen; Merce Màrquez; Maarit J Myöhänen; Marjo K Hytönen; Hannes Lohi
Journal:  Biol Open       Date:  2015-09-09       Impact factor: 2.422

Review 10.  Renal manifestations of genetic mitochondrial disease.

Authors:  John F O'Toole
Journal:  Int J Nephrol Renovasc Dis       Date:  2014-01-31
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