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POLRMT mutations impair mitochondrial transcription causing neurological disease

Authors :
Kimia Kahrizi
Tomáš Mráček
Hector Diaz-Maldonado
Maria Falkenberg
Safoora B. Syeda
Penelope E. Bonnen
Stanislav Kmoch
Peter B. Kang
Zuzana Korandová
Emily Hoberg
Bradley Peter
Lauren Brady
K. Nicole Weaver
Louis M. Kunkel
Alena Pecinová
Mark A. Tarnopolsky
Zsolt Szilagyi
Hossein Najmabadi
Meenakshi Singh
Ewen W. Sommerville
Sasigarn A. Bowden
Elicia Estrella
Kim L. McBride
Hans-Hilger Ropers
Grainne S. Gorman
Emma L. Blakely
Claes M. Gustafsson
Viktor Stránecký
Christine C. Bruels
Monika Oláhová
Sander Pajusalu
Carlos E. Prada
Jack J Collier
Katrin Õunap
Lynn Pais
Hana Hartmannová
Monica H. Wojcik
Robert W. Taylor
Anthony J. Bleyer
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

While >300 disease-causing variants have been identified in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) polymerase γ, no mitochondrial phenotypes have been associated with POLRMT, the RNA polymerase responsible for transcription of the mitochondrial genome. Here, we characterise the clinical and molecular nature of POLRMT variants in eight individuals from seven unrelated families. Patients present with global developmental delay, hypotonia, short stature, and speech/intellectual disability in childhood; one subject displayed an indolent progressive external ophthalmoplegia phenotype. Massive parallel sequencing of all subjects identifies recessive and dominant variants in the POLRMT gene. Patient fibroblasts have a defect in mitochondrial mRNA synthesis, but no mtDNA deletions or copy number abnormalities. The in vitro characterisation of the recombinant POLRMT mutants reveals variable, but deleterious effects on mitochondrial transcription. Together, our in vivo and in vitro functional studies of POLRMT variants establish defective mitochondrial transcription as an important disease mechanism.<br />POLRMT is key for transcription of the mitochondrial genome, yet has not been implicated in mitochondrial disease to date. Here, the authors identify mutations in POLRMT in individuals with mitochondrial disease-related phenotypes and characterise underlying defects in mitochondrial transcription.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6d3cd65a0bc920d80c2e2a494ae76daf