| Literature DB >> 29211846 |
Giuseppe Punzi1, Vito Porcelli1, Matteo Ruggiu2, Md F Hossain2, Alessio Menga1, Pasquale Scarcia1, Alessandra Castegna1, Ruggiero Gorgoglione1, Ciro L Pierri1, Luna Laera1,3, Francesco M Lasorsa3, Eleonora Paradies3, Isabella Pisano1, Carlo M T Marobbio1, Eleonora Lamantea4, Daniele Ghezzi4,5, Valeria Tiranti4, Sergio Giannattasio3, Maria A Donati6, Renzo Guerrini6,7, Luigi Palmieri1,3, Ferdinando Palmieri1,3, Anna De Grassi1.
Abstract
Mitochondrial diseases are a plethora of inherited neuromuscular disorders sharing defects in mitochondrial respiration, but largely different from one another for genetic basis and pathogenic mechanism. Whole exome sequencing was performed in a familiar trio (trio-WES) with a child affected by severe epileptic encephalopathy associated with respiratory complex I deficiency and mitochondrial DNA depletion in skeletal muscle. By trio-WES we identified biallelic mutations in SLC25A10, a nuclear gene encoding a member of the mitochondrial carrier family. Genetic and functional analyses conducted on patient fibroblasts showed that SLC25A10 mutations are associated with reduction in RNA quantity and aberrant RNA splicing, and to absence of SLC25A10 protein and its transporting function. The yeast SLC25A10 ortholog knockout strain showed defects in mitochondrial respiration and mitochondrial DNA content, similarly to what observed in the patient skeletal muscle, and growth susceptibility to oxidative stress. Albeit patient fibroblasts were depleted in the main antioxidant molecules NADPH and glutathione, transport assays demonstrated that SLC25A10 is unable to transport glutathione. Here, we report the first recessive mutations of SLC25A10 associated to an inherited severe mitochondrial neurodegenerative disorder. We propose that SLC25A10 loss-of-function causes pathological disarrangements in respiratory-demanding conditions and oxidative stress vulnerability.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29211846 PMCID: PMC5886107 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddx419
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150