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Biallelic mutations in NDUFA8 cause complex I deficiency in two siblings with favorable clinical evolution

  • Frederic Tort
  • , Estibaliz Barredo
  • , Ranjani Parthasarathy
  • , Olatz Ugarteburu
  • , Xenia Ferrer-Cortès
  • , Judit García-Villoria
  • , Laura Gort
  • , Adrián González-Quintana
  • , Miguel A. Martín
  • , Erika Fernández-Vizarra
  • , Massimo Zeviani
  • , Antonia Ribes*
  • *Autor correspondiente de este trabajo
  • University of Cambridge

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

11 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Isolated complex I (CI) deficiency is the most common cause of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) dysfunction. Whole-exome sequencing identified biallelic mutations in NDUFA8 (c.[293G > T]; [293G > T], encoding for an accessory subunit of CI, in two siblings with a favorable clinical evolution. The individuals reported here are practically asymptomatic, with the exception of slight failure to thrive and some language difficulties at the age of 6 and 9 years, respectively. These observations are remarkable since the vast majority of patients with CI deficiency, including the only NDUFA8 patient reported so far, showed an extremely poor clinical outcome. Western blot studies demonstrated that NDUFA8 protein was strongly reduced in the patients' fibroblasts and muscle extracts. In addition, there was a marked and specific decrease in the steady-state levels of CI subunits. BN-PAGE demonstrated an isolated defect in the assembly and the activity of CI with impaired supercomplexes formation and abnormal accumulation of CI subassemblies. Confocal microscopy analysis in fibroblasts showed rounder mitochondria and diminished branching degree of the mitochondrial network. Functional complementation studies demonstrated disease-causality for the identified mutation as lentiviral transduction with wild-type NDUFA8 cDNA restored the steady-state levels of CI subunits and completely recovered the deficient enzymatic activity in immortalized mutant fibroblasts. In summary, we provide additional evidence of the involvement of NDUFA8 as a mitochondrial disease-causing gene associated with altered mitochondrial morphology, CI deficiency, impaired supercomplexes formation, and very mild progression of the disease.

Idioma originalInglés
Páginas (desde-hasta)349-357
Número de páginas9
PublicaciónMolecular Genetics and Metabolism
Volumen131
N.º3
DOI
EstadoPublicada - nov 2020
Publicado de forma externa

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