| Literature DB >> 24118886 |
A Blanco-Grau1, I Bonaventura-Ibars, J Coll-Cantí, M J Melià, R Martinez, M Martínez-Gallo, A L Andreu, T Pinós, E García-Arumí.
Abstract
Mutations in the ATP6 gene are reported to be associated with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy, bilateral striatal necrosis, coronary atherosclerosis risk and neuropathy, ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa (NARP)/maternally inherited Leigh syndromes. Here, we present a patient with NARP syndrome, in whom a previously undescribed mutation was detected in the ATP6 gene: m.8839G>C. Several observations support the concept that m.8839G>C is pathogenically involved in the clinical phenotype of this patient: (1) the mutation was heteroplasmic in muscle; (2) mutation load was higher in the symptomatic patient than in the asymptomatic carriers; (3) cybrids carrying this mutation presented lower cell proliferation, increased mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number, increased steady-state OxPhos protein levels and decreased mitochondrial membrane potential with respect to isogenic wild-type cybrids; (4) this change was not observed in 2959 human mtDNAs from different mitochondrial haplogroups; (5) the affected amino acid was conserved in all the ATP6 sequences analyzed; and (6) using in silico prediction, the mutation was classified as 'probably damaging'. However, measurement of ATP synthesis showed no differences between wild-type and mutated cybrids. Thus, we suggest that m.8839G>C may lower the efficiency between proton translocation within F0 and F1 rotation, required for ATP synthesis. Further experiments are needed to fully characterize the molecular mechanisms involved in m.8839G>C pathogenicity.Entities:
Keywords: ATP6; NARP syndrome; cybrids; mtDNA; novel mutation
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24118886 DOI: 10.1111/gbb.12089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Brain Behav ISSN: 1601-183X Impact factor: 3.449