Lethal infantile mitochondrial disease with isolated complex I deficiency in fibroblasts but with combined complex I and IV deficiencies in muscle

H Bentlage, U Wendel, H Schagger, HJ Ter Laak… - Neurology, 1996 - AAN Enterprises
H Bentlage, U Wendel, H Schagger, HJ Ter Laak, AJM Janssen, JMF Trijbels
Neurology, 1996AAN Enterprises
A 2-month-old boy died of a lethal infantile mitochondrial disease with severe lactic acidosis
and involvement of the CNS. Histochemical analysis of skeletal muscle showed that
cytochrome c oxidase staining was lacking in all muscle fibers but was present in arterioles.
Ragged red fibers were not seen, but some fibers showed excessive staining for succinate
dehydrogenase. Biochemical analysis revealed a combined complex I and IV deficiency in
skeletal muscle but only a complex I deficiency in his fibroblasts. Two-dimensional native …
A 2-month-old boy died of a lethal infantile mitochondrial disease with severe lactic acidosis and involvement of the CNS. Histochemical analysis of skeletal muscle showed that cytochrome c oxidase staining was lacking in all muscle fibers but was present in arterioles. Ragged red fibers were not seen, but some fibers showed excessive staining for succinate dehydrogenase. Biochemical analysis revealed a combined complex I and IV deficiency in skeletal muscle but only a complex I deficiency in his fibroblasts. Two-dimensional native SDS electrophoresis confirmed these enzymatic findings at the protein level. Analysis of mitochondrial translation products in fibroblasts revealed no abnormalities, and analysis of mitochondrial DNA in muscle showed no depletion, large-scale deletions, or frequently occurring point mutations. We conclude that this disease must have been the result of either a nuclear DNA mutation in a gene controlling the expression or assembly of both complex I and the muscle-specific isoform of complex IV or, alternatively, a heteroplasmic point mutation in a mitochondrial tRNA, which codon is used more often by mtDNA encoded subunits of complex I than by mtDNA encoded subunits of complex IV. A different degree of heteroplasmy in skeletal muscle and fibroblasts would then explain the curious heterogeneous tissue expression of defects in this patient.
NEUROLOGY 1996;47: 243-248
American Academy of Neurology