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Metabolic shift underlies recovery in reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency

Authors :
Michele Giunta
Hanns Lochmueller
Monica Machado Navarro
Denisa Hathazi
Sarah F Pearce
Serenella Servidei
Michal Minczuk
Manta Giri
Christopher A. Powell
Vamsi K. Mootha
Juliane S Mueller
Claudia Calabrese
Benjamin Munro
Rita Horvath
Veronika Boczonadi
Matthew J. Jennings
Ana Cotta
Andreas Roos
Eric P Hoffmann
Angela Pyle
Michael G. Hanna
Mar Tulinius
Michio Hirano
Wei Wei
Joanna Poulton
Kristine Chapman
Julia Filardi Paim
Robert D S Pitceathly
Helen Griffin
Andre Mattmann
Aurora Gomez-Duran
Johanna Uusima
Ulrike Schara
Kairit Joost
Jennifer Duff
Salvatore DiMauro
Patrick F. Chinnery
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

Reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency (RIRCD) is a rare mitochondrial myopathy leading to severe metabolic disturbances in infants, which recover spontaneously after 6 months of age. RIRCD is associated with the homoplasmic m.14674T>C mitochondrial DNA mutation, however only ∼1/100 carriers develop the disease. We studied 27 affected and 15 unaffected individuals from 19 families and found additional heterozygous mutations in nuclear genes interacting with mt-tRNAGluincludingEARS2andTRMUin the majority of affected individuals, but not in healthy carriers of m.14674T>C, supporting a digenic inheritance. The spontaneous recovery in infants with digenic mutations is modulated by changes in amino acid availability in a multi-step process. First, the integrated stress-response associated with increasedFGF21andGDF15expression enhances catabolism via β-oxidation and the TCA cycle increasing the availability of amino acids. In the second phase mitochondrial biogenesis increases via mTOR activation, leading to improved mitochondrial translation and recovery. Similar mechanisms may explain the variable penetrance and tissue specificity of other mtDNA mutations and highlight the potential role of amino acids in improving mitochondrial disease.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....df47fd8ee77de56e35ac6c2738539029
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.04.21.20073759