Prevalence of rare mitochondrial DNA mutations in mitochondrial disorders

Archive ouverte

Bannwarth, Sylvie | Procaccio, Vincent | Lebre, Anne-Sophie | Jardel, Claude | Chaussenot, A. | Hoarau, C. | Maoulida, H. | Charrier, N. | Gai, X. | Xie, H. | Ferré, Marc | Fragaki, K. | Hardy, G. | Mousson de Camaret, Bénédicte | Marlin, S. | Dhaenens, C. | Slama, A. | Rocher, C. | Bonnefont, Paul | Rotig, Agnès | Aoutil, N. | Gilleron, M. | Desquiret-Dumas, Valérie | Reynier, Pascal | Ceresuela, J. | Jonard, L. | Devos, A. | Espil-Taris, C. | Martinez, Delphine | Gaignard, P. | Sang, K. | Amati-Bonneau, Patrizia | Falk, M. | Florentz, C. | Chabrol, Brigitte | Durand-Zaleski, Isabelle | Paquis-Flucklinger, Veronique

Edité par CCSD ; BMJ Publishing Group -

International audience.

BACKGROUND: Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diseases are rare disorders whose prevalence is estimated around 1 in 5000. Patients are usually tested only for deletions and for common mutations of mtDNA which account for 5-40% of cases, depending on the study. However, the prevalence of rare mtDNA mutations is not known. METHODS: We analysed the whole mtDNA in a cohort of 743 patients suspected of manifesting a mitochondrial disease, after excluding deletions and common mutations. Both heteroplasmic and homoplasmic variants were identified using two complementary strategies (Surveyor and MitoChip). Multiple correspondence analyses followed by hierarchical ascendant cluster process were used to explore relationships between clinical spectrum, age at onset and localisation of mutations. RESULTS: 7.4% of deleterious mutations and 22.4% of novel putative mutations were identified. Pathogenic heteroplasmic mutations were more frequent than homoplasmic mutations (4.6% vs 2.8%). Patients carrying deleterious mutations showed symptoms before 16 years of age in 67% of cases. Early onset disease (<1 year) was significantly associated with mutations in protein coding genes (mainly in complex I) while late onset disorders (>16 years) were associated with mutations in tRNA genes. MTND5 and MTND6 genes were identified as 'hotspots' of mutations, with Leigh syndrome accounting for the large majority of associated phenotypes. CONCLUSIONS: Rare mitochondrial DNA mutations probably account for more than 7.4% of patients with respiratory chain deficiency. This study shows that a comprehensive analysis of mtDNA is essential, and should include young children, for an accurate diagnosis that is now accessible with the development of next generation sequencing technology.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Refractory epilepsy and mitochondrial dysfunction due to GM3 synthase deficiency

Archive ouverte | Fragaki, K. | CCSD

International audience. We report two children, born from consanguineous parents, who presented with early-onset refractory epilepsy associated with psychomotor delay, failure to thrive, blindness and deafness. Pola...

The MFN2 gene is responsible for mitochondrial DNA instability and optic atrophy 'plus' phenotype

Archive ouverte | Rouzier, C. | CCSD

International audience. MFN2 and OPA1 genes encode two dynamin-like GTPase proteins involved in the fusion of the mitochondrial membrane. They have been associated with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2A and autoso...

eKLIPse: a sensitive tool for the detection and quantification of mitochondrial DNA deletions from next-generation sequencing data

Archive ouverte | Goudenège, David | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...