Back to Search Start Over

Bi‐allelic pathogenic variants in NDUFC2 cause early‐onset Leigh syndrome and stalled biogenesis of complex I

Authors :
Eleonora Lamantea
Robert McFarland
Langping He
Alessia Nasca
Anna Ardissone
Daniele Ghezzi
Kyle Thompson
Andrea Legati
Charlotte L. Alston
Seham Alameer
Robert W. Taylor
Fahad Hakami
Monika Oláhová
Abeer Almehdar
Juliana Heidler
Ahmad Alahmad
Ilka Wittig
Jana Meisterknecht
Manuela Spagnolo
Source :
EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 12, Iss 11, Pp n/a-n/a (2020), EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
EMBO, 2020.

Abstract

Leigh syndrome is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder, most commonly observed in paediatric mitochondrial disease, and is often associated with pathogenic variants in complex I structural subunits or assembly factors resulting in isolated respiratory chain complex I deficiency. Clinical heterogeneity has been reported, but key diagnostic findings are developmental regression, elevated lactate and characteristic neuroimaging abnormalities. Here, we describe three affected children from two unrelated families who presented with Leigh syndrome due to homozygous variants (c.346_*7del and c.173A>T p.His58Leu) in NDUFC2, encoding a complex I subunit. Biochemical and functional investigation of subjects’ fibroblasts confirmed a severe defect in complex I activity, subunit expression and assembly. Lentiviral transduction of subjects’ fibroblasts with wild‐type NDUFC2 cDNA increased complex I assembly supporting the association of the identified NDUFC2 variants with mitochondrial pathology. Complexome profiling confirmed a loss of NDUFC2 and defective complex I assembly, revealing aberrant assembly intermediates suggestive of stalled biogenesis of the complex I holoenzyme and indicating a crucial role for NDUFC2 in the assembly of the membrane arm of complex I, particularly the ND2 module.<br />This work describes the first confirmed pathogenic variants in NDUFC2 in a case of mitochondrial disease presenting with symptoms of Leigh syndrome and a severe deficiency in OXPHOS complex I. NDUFC2 was shown to be important for the assembly of the membrane arm of complex I.

Details

ISSN :
17574684 and 17574676
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ada59065e8cb51941b837c36a5a138b