학술논문

ETFDH mutations as a major cause of riboflavin-responsive multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenation deficiency.
Document Type
Source
Brain : a journal of neurology. 130(Pt 8):2045-54
Subject
MEDICAL AND HEALTH SCIENCES
MEDICIN OCH HÄLSOVETENSKAP
Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase
deficiency
Adolescent
Adult
Brain Diseases
Metabolic
enzymology
genetics
Carnitine
analogs & derivatives
blood
Child
Preschool
Electron Transport
physiology
Electron-Transferring Flavoproteins
Fatty Acids
metabolism
Female
Humans
Iron-Sulfur Proteins
Male
Metabolism
Inborn Errors
pathology
Mitochondria
Muscle
Mitochondrial Myopathies
drug therapy
Skeletal
Mutation
Oxidation-Reduction
Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-NH Group Donors
Riboflavin
therapeutic use
Language
English
ISSN
1460-2156
Abstract
Multiple acyl-CoA dehydrogenation deficiency (MADD) is a disorder of fatty acid, amino acid and choline metabolism that can result from defects in two flavoproteins, electron transfer flavoprotein (ETF) or ETF: ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF:QO). Some patients respond to pharmacological doses of riboflavin. It is unknown whether these patients have defects in the flavoproteins themselves or defects in the formation of the cofactor, FAD, from riboflavin. We report 15 patients from 11 pedigrees. All the index cases presented with encephalopathy or muscle weakness or a combination of these symptoms; several had previously suffered cyclical vomiting. Urine organic acid and plasma acyl-carnitine profiles indicated MADD. Clinical and biochemical parameters were either totally or partly corrected after riboflavin treatment. All patients had mutations in the gene for ETF:QO. In one patient, we show that the ETF:QO mutations are associated with a riboflavin-sensitive impairment of ETF:QO activity. This patient also had partial deficiencies of flavin-dependent acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and respiratory chain complexes, most of which were restored to control levels after riboflavin treatment. Low activities of mitochondrial flavoproteins or respiratory chain complexes have been reported previously in two of our patients with ETF:QO mutations. We postulate that riboflavin-responsive MADD may result from defects of ETF:QO combined with general mitochondrial dysfunction. This is the largest collection of riboflavin-responsive MADD patients ever reported, and the first demonstration of the molecular genetic basis for the disorder.