| Literature DB >> 31083569 |
Jason Duran1, Armando Martinez2, Eric Adler3.
Abstract
Genetic mitochondrial cardiomyopathies are uncommon causes of heart failure that may not be seen by most physicians. However, the prevalence of mitochondrial DNA mutations and somatic mutations affecting mitochondrial function are more common than previously thought. In this review, the pathogenesis of genetic mitochondrial disorders causing cardiovascular disease is reviewed. Treatment options are presently limited to mostly symptomatic support, but preclinical research is starting to reveal novel approaches that may lead to better and more targeted therapies in the future. With better understanding and clinician education, we hope to improve clinician recognition and diagnosis of these rare disorders in order to improve ongoing care of patients with these diseases and advance research towards discovering new therapeutic strategies to help treat these diseases.Entities:
Keywords: cardiomyopathy; cardiovascular disease; genetic mutations; heart failure; mitochondrial
Year: 2019 PMID: 31083569 PMCID: PMC6628328 DOI: 10.3390/biology8020034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biology (Basel) ISSN: 2079-7737
Summary of mitochondrial disorders with cardiac phenotypes.
| Disease | Incidence Age at Onset/Death | Primary Phenotype | Cardiac Manifestations | Genetic Mutations | Treatments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MELAS | 0.18/100,000 |
Stroke-like symptoms Encephalopathy Lactic Acidemia Myopathy | 30% of cases: HCM, DCM Conduction abnormalities (WPW) | A324G (80% of cases) |
Nitric oxide precursors Citrulline supplementation Ketogenic diet Creatine, CoQ10, lipoic acid therapy |
| Leigh Syndrome | 1/32,000–40,000 |
Encephalopathy with cognitive and behavioral dysfunction Seizures Hypotonia/Ataxia Oculomotor dysfunction Respiratory dysfunction | 20% of cases: HCM Pericardial effusions Conduction abnormalities | Mutations to SURF1 gene |
High dose biotin Thiamine for SLC19A3 CoQ10 |
| MERRF | 0.9 or <1/100,000 |
Myoclonus Lactic acidosis Cerebellar ataxia Muscle weakness Ragged red fibers |
DCM HCM Conduction abnormalities (WPW, SVT, RBBB) | A8344G (83–90% of cases and 53% of cases with cardiac involvement) |
Treatment of seizures with antiepileptic drugs |
| MIDD | 6/100,000 |
Diabetes (type I or II) Bilateral neurosensory hearing loss |
LVH (55%) HCM (15–30%) Conduction abnormalities (WPW, SSS, Afib) | A3243G |
Treatment of diabetes Cochlear implantation CoQ10 |
| NARP | 1/12,000–40,000 |
Neuropathy Ataxia Retinitis Pigmentosa Deafness Myoclonic epilepsy |
DCM HCM Conduction abnormalities (WPW) | Point mutations at 8993 |
Experimental: mitochondrially targeted obligate heterodimeric zinc finger nucleases to target mitochondrial DNA with the NARP T8993G mutation |
| GRACILE | 1/47,000 (in Finland, may be lower worldwide) |
Growth restriction Aminoaciduria Cholestasis Iron overload Early death |
Prolonged QT Reduced levels of complex III in myocardial tissues post mortem | homozygous point mutation A232G within the BCS1L gene |
Symptomatic/palliative care (usually lethal in first months of life). |
| MNGIE | * Only 100 cases ever reported |
Chronic intestinal dysmotility Leukoencephalopathy Failure to thrive Ptosis Ophthalmoparesis Peripheral neuropathy |
LVH Conduction abnormalities (prolonged QT, SVT, sudden cardiac death) | Loss of function mutations to thymidine phosphorylase (TP) gene, chromosome 22q13.32-qter |
Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation Platelet transfusion Hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis Experimental gene therapies aimed to restore thymidine phosphorylase activity |
| Barth Syndrome | 1:300,000–400,000 |
DCM Skeletal myopathy (proximal) Neutropenia Growth retardation |
DCM Cardiac abnormalities in utero Endocardial fibroelastosis LV noncompaction Conduction abnormalities (prolonged WT, SVT, WPW, VT) | G4.5 gene (TAZ gene) on Xq28 |
Treatment of heart failure Cardiac transplantation |
| LHON | 1/31,000–50,000 |
Acute/subacute painless vision loss Dystonia Peripheral neuropathy |
LV hypertrebeculation Prolonged QT WPW | 90% caused by G11778A (ND4 gene), G3460A (ND1 gene), and the T14484C (NG6 gene) which all cause dysfunction in complex I |
EPI-743: experimental drug targeting glutathione production Idebenone (antioxidant that can slow vision loss) |
| Pearson Syndrome | 1/1,000,000 |
Transfusion-dependent anemia (presenting finding) Severe Infections Liver, Kidney, Pancreas and CNS abnormalities |
Increased wall thickness Depolarization abnormalities Prolonged QT | Large deletions ranging from 4.9–14 kb |
Treatment of anemia with transfusions, EPO, GCSF Treatment of pancreatic insufficiency with enzyme replacement |
| Kearns-Sayre Syndrome | 1–3/100,000 |
Progressive external ophthalmoplegia (ptosis, weakness of eye muscles) Retinopathy Ataxia Elevated CSF proteins |
Conduction abnormalities (AV block requiring PPM) Cardiac arrest | Large deletions ranging from 1000 to 10,000 base pairs |
ECG screening PPM implantation for AV block |
| CPEO | 1–3/100,000 |
Loss of motor function of the eye and eyelid Spectrum of disorders with PS and KSS |
HCM Arrhythmias | Large mtDNA deletions similar to PS or KSS |
Symptomatic/supportive care |
| Freiderich’s Ataxia | 1–47:1,000,000 |
Progressive ataxia/areflexia Progressive and life-threatening cardiomyopathy (2/3 patients die from cardiovascular causes) |
HCM DCM | Expansion of DNA triplet intron repeat GAA in the frataxin (FXN) gene |
Idebenone (antioxidant), reduces cardiac hypertrophy |
Abbreviations: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome (WPW), supraventricular tachycardia (SVT), right bundle branch block (RBBB), left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), sick sinus syndrome (SSS), atrial fibrillation (Afib), ventricular tachyarrhythmias, permanent pacemaker (PPM), autosomal dominant (AD).
Genetic mutations associated with mitochondrial disorders.
| Disease | Mutations |
|---|---|
| MELAS | |
| Leigh Syndrome | Mutations to |
| MERRF | |
| MIDD | |
| NARP | Point mutations at |
| GRACILE | Homozygous point mutation A232G within the BCS1L gene |
| MNGIE | Loss of function mutations to |
| Barth Syndrome | |
| LHON | 90% caused by |
| Pearson Syndrome | Large deletions ranging from 4.9–14 kb |
| Kearns-Sayre Syndrome | Large deletions ranging from 1000 to 10,000 base pairs |
| CPEO | Large mtDNA deletions similar to PS or KSS, AD form: mutations to nuclear-encoded genes |
| Freiderich’s Ataxia | Expansion of DNA |
*Principal mutations of each disorder are bolded (that most frequently attributed to each disease).