| Literature DB >> 32929747 |
Claire-Marine Bérat1,2,3, Sebastian Montealegre1,3, Arnaud Wiedemann4, Malou Le Corronc Nuzum1, Amélie Blondel5, Hugo Debruge1, Aline Cano6, Brigitte Chabrol6, Célia Hoebeke6, Michel Polak2,7, Athanasia Stoupa2,7, François Feillet4, Stéphanie Torre8, Nathalie Boddaert2,9, Henri Bruel10, Magalie Barth11, Lena Damaj12, Marie-Thérèse Abi-Wardé13, Alexandra Afenjar14, Jean-François Benoist5, Marine Madrange1,3, Laure Caccavelli1,3, Perrine Renard1, Arnaud Hubas15, Patrick Nusbaum15, Clément Pontoizeau5, Stéphanie Gobin16, Peter van Endert1,2, Chris Ottolenghi5, Alice Maltret17, Pascale de Lonlay1,2,3.
Abstract
TANGO2 disease is a severe inherited disorder associating multiple symptoms such as metabolic crises, encephalopathy, cardiac arrhythmias, and hypothyroidism. The mechanism of action of TANGO2 is currently unknown. Here, we describe a cohort of 20 French patients bearing mutations in the TANGO2 gene. We found that the main clinical presentation was the association of neurodevelopmental delay (n = 17), acute metabolic crises (n = 17) and hypothyroidism (n = 12), with a large intrafamilial clinical variability. Metabolic crises included rhabdomyolysis (15/17), neurological symptoms (14/17), and cardiac features (12/17; long QT (n = 10), Brugada pattern (n = 2), cardiac arrhythmia (n = 6)) that required intensive care. We show previously uncharacterized triggers of metabolic crises in TANGO2 patients, such as some anesthetics and possibly l-carnitine. Unexpectedly, plasma acylcarnitines, plasma FGF-21, muscle histology, and mitochondrial spectrometry were mostly normal. Moreover, in patients' primary myoblasts, palmitate and glutamine oxidation rates, and the mitochondrial network were also normal. Finally, we found variable mitochondrial respiration and defective clearance of oxidized DNA upon cycles of starvation and refeeding. We conclude that TANGO2 disease is a life-threatening disease that needs specific cardiac management and anesthesia protocol. Mechanistically, TANGO2 disease is unlikely to originate from a primary mitochondrial defect. Rather, we suggest that mitochondrial defects are secondary to strong extrinsic triggers in TANGO2 deficient patients.Entities:
Keywords: Brugada pattern; TANGO2; glutamate oxidation; long-QT; palmitate oxidation; triggers
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32929747 DOI: 10.1002/jimd.12314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis ISSN: 0141-8955 Impact factor: 4.982