학술논문

Novel mutations in the mitochondrial complex I assembly gene NDUFAF5 reveal heterogeneous phenotypes
Document Type
article
Source
Molecular Genetics and Metabolism. 126(1)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Genetics
Human Genome
Brain Disorders
Neurodegenerative
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Adolescent
Biopsy
Child
Child
Preschool
Electron Transport Complex I
Female
Humans
Infant
Leigh Disease
Male
Methyltransferases
Mitochondrial Diseases
Mitochondrial Proteins
Mutation
Pedigree
Phenotype
Skin
Exome Sequencing
Whole Genome Sequencing
Young Adult
Complex I
Leigh syndrome
Mitochondrial disease
Splicing
Hyponatremia
NDUFAF5
Clinical Sciences
Genetics & Heredity
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Primary mitochondrial complex I deficiency is the most common defect of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. It is caused by defects in structural components and assembly factors of this large protein complex. Mutations in the assembly factor NDUFAF5 are rare, with only five families reported to date. This study provides clinical, biochemical, molecular and functional data for four unrelated additional families, and three novel pathogenic variants. Three cases presented in infancy with lactic acidosis and classic Leigh syndrome. One patient, however, has a milder phenotype, with symptoms starting at 27 months and a protracted clinical course with improvement and relapsing episodes. She is homozygous for a previously reported mutation, p.Met279Arg and alive at 19 years with mild neurological involvement, normal lactate but abnormal urine organic acids. We found the same mutation in one of our severely affected patients in compound heterozygosity with a novel p.Lys52Thr mutation. Both patients with p.Met279Arg are of Taiwanese descent and had severe hyponatremia. Our third and fourth patients, both Caucasian, shared a common, newly described, missense mutation p.Lys109Asn which we show induces skipping of exon 3. Both Caucasian patients were compound heterozygotes, one with a previously reported Ashkenazi founder mutation while the other was negative for additional exonic variants. Whole genome sequencing followed by RNA studies revealed a novel deep intronic variant at position c.223-907A>C inducing an exonic splice enhancer. Our report adds significant new information to the mutational spectrum of NDUFAF5, further delineating the phenotypic heterogeneity of this mitochondrial defect.