| Literature DB >> 27053192 |
Maria Lane1, Veronika Boczonadi1, Sahar Bachtari2, Aurora Gomez-Duran1, Thorsten Langer3, Alexandra Griffiths1, Stephanie Kleinle4, Christine Dineiger4, Angela Abicht4, Elke Holinski-Feder4, Ulrike Schara5, Patrick Gerner2,6, Rita Horvath7.
Abstract
Liver failure is a heterogeneous condition which may be fatal and the primary cause is frequently unknown. We investigated mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation in patients undergoing liver transplantation. We studied 45 patients who had liver transplantation due to a variety of clinical presentations. Blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with immunodetection of respiratory chain complexes I-V, biochemical activity of respiratory chain complexes II and IV and quantification of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) copy number were investigated in liver tissue collected from the explanted liver during transplantation. Abnormal mitochondrial function was frequently present in this cohort: ten of 40 patients (25 %) had a defect of one or more respiratory chain enzyme complexes on blue native gels, 20 patients (44 %) had low activity of complex II and/or IV and ten (22 %) had a reduced mtDNA copy number. Combined respiratory chain deficiency and reduced numbers of mitochondria were detected in all three patients with acute liver failure. Low complex IV activity in biliary atresia and complex II defects in cirrhosis were common findings. All six patients diagnosed with liver tumours showed variable alterations in mitochondrial function, probably due to the heterogeneity of the presenting tumour. In conclusion, mitochondrial dysfunction is common in severe liver failure in non-mitochondrial conditions. Therefore, in contrast to the common practice detection of respiratory chain abnormalities in liver should not restrict the inclusion of patients for liver transplantation. Furthermore, improving mitochondrial function may be targeted as part of a complex therapy approach in different forms of liver diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27053192 PMCID: PMC4851707 DOI: 10.1007/s10545-016-9927-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis ISSN: 0141-8955 Impact factor: 4.982
Summary of mitochondrial causes of liver failure with respiratory chain deficiency
| Type of mitochondrial dysfunction | Name | Genes involved | Respiratory chain defect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disorders of mtDNA maintenance | Hepatocerebral mitochondrial disease |
| Combined RC defect |
| Pearson syndrome | Single mtDNA deletion | Combined RC defect | |
| Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome |
| Combined RC defect or normal | |
| Disorders of mitochondrial protein synthesis | Reversible infantile mitochondrial hepatopathy |
| Combined RC defect |
| Mitochondrial tRNA synthetase defects |
| ||
| Nuclear translation initiation-elongation factors |
| Combined RC defect | |
| Defects of OXPHOS complex assembly | Complex III assembly |
| Complex III |
| Complex IV assembly |
| Complex IV |
Number of patients with deficiencies on BN PAGE, respiratory chain enzyme activities and mtDNA copy numbers in the cohort of 45 patients
| Diagnosis (number of patients) | BN PAGE <50 % | Complex II and IV <50 % | mtDNA copy number <30 % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Acute liver failure (3) | 3/3 (100 %) | 3/3 (100 %) | 3/3 (100 %) |
| Biliary atresia (9) | 1/8 (13 %) | 5/9 (56 %) | 2/9 (22 %) |
| Cirrhosis (11) | 3/10 (30 %) | 6/11 (55 %) | 2/11 (18 %) |
| Tumour (6) | 3/5 (60 %) | 2/6 (33 %) | 2/6 (33 %) |
| Other (16) | 0 | 4/16 (25 %) | 1/16 (6 %) |
| Total | 10/40 (25 %) | 20/45 (44 %) | 10/45 (22 %) |
Fig. 1We show the distribution of mtDNA copy numbers and the activities of respiratory chain complexes II, IV and citrate synthase in 45 patients with liver failure. One way ANOVA shows the effect of liver failure on mtDNA copy number (a) and on the activities of complex II (c), complex IV (d) and citrate synthase (b). Patients are divided according to diagnosis and results are given as a percentage of the control values
Fig. 2BN PAGE analysis and measurement of enzyme activities in acute liver failure in acute liver failure and biliary atresia. Acute liver failure. a Respiratory complexes isolated from control and patients with acute liver failure were separated using blue native gel electrophoresis on gradient Bis-Tris acrylamide gels. b Quantification of respiratory complexes was carried out with band densitometry. Graphs show the level of complexes relative to the control samples. Porin was used as a loading control. Red dotted line indicates 50 % of the control samples. Complex activities were measured spectrophotometrically as described in Methods. Data presented in percent changes relative to the control samples. c Citrate synthase activity. Combined data from all three patients shows a significant decrease (p = 0.045) in activity when compared to the control group. d Complex II activity. Combined data from all three patients shows a significant decrease (p = 0.008) in activity when compared to the control group. e Complex IV activity. Combined data from all three patients shows a significant decrease (p < 0.017) in activity when compared to the control group. f mt-DNA copy number. Error bars represent standard deviation. Biliary atresia. g Mitochondrial complexes isolated from control and liver failure patients’ liver were separated using blue native gel electrophoresis on gradient Bis-Tris acrylamide gels. h Quantification of respiratory complexes was carried out with band densitometry. Graphs represent the level of complexes relative to the control samples. Band intensities were normalised to complex II. Red dotted line indicates 50 % of the control samples. i Complex II activity. j Complex IV activity. Error bars represent standard deviation
Fig. 3BN PAGE and measurement of enzyme activities in cirrhosis and liver tumours. Liver cirrhosis. a Mitochondrial complexes isolated from control and cirrhosis patients’ liver were separated using blue native gel electrophoresis on gradient Bis-Tris acrylamide gels. b Quantification of respiratory complexes was carried out with band densitometry. Graphs represent the level of complexes relative to the control samples. Band intensities were normalised to complex II. Red dotted line indicates 50 % of the control samples. c Complex II activity. d Complex IV activity. Error bars represent standard deviation. Liver tumours. e Mitochondrial complexes isolated from control and tumour patients’ liver were separated using blue native gel electrophoresis on gradient Bis-Tris acrylamide gels. f Quantification of respiratory complexes was carried out with band densitometry. Graphs represent the level of complexes relative to the control samples (100 %). Band intensities were normalised to complex II. Red dotted line indicates 50 % of the control samples. g Complex II activity. h Complex IV activity. Error bars represent standard deviation