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Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations

We investigated clinical and cellular phenotypes of 24 children with mutations in the catalytic (alpha) subunit of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) gamma polymerase (POLG1). Twenty-one had Alpers syndrome, the commonest severe POLG1 autosomal recessive phenotype, comprising hepatoencephalopathy and oft...

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Autores principales: Ashley, Neil, O'Rourke, Anthony, Smith, Conrad, Adams, Susan, Gowda, Vasantha, Zeviani, Massimo, Brown, Garry K., Fratter, Carl, Poulton, Joanna
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2486441/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18487244
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddn150
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author Ashley, Neil
O'Rourke, Anthony
Smith, Conrad
Adams, Susan
Gowda, Vasantha
Zeviani, Massimo
Brown, Garry K.
Fratter, Carl
Poulton, Joanna
author_facet Ashley, Neil
O'Rourke, Anthony
Smith, Conrad
Adams, Susan
Gowda, Vasantha
Zeviani, Massimo
Brown, Garry K.
Fratter, Carl
Poulton, Joanna
author_sort Ashley, Neil
collection PubMed
description We investigated clinical and cellular phenotypes of 24 children with mutations in the catalytic (alpha) subunit of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) gamma polymerase (POLG1). Twenty-one had Alpers syndrome, the commonest severe POLG1 autosomal recessive phenotype, comprising hepatoencephalopathy and often mtDNA depletion. The cellular mtDNA content reflected the genotype more closely than did clinical features. Patients with tissue depletion of mtDNA all had at least one allele with either a missense mutation in a catalytic domain or a nonsense mutation. Four out of 12 patients exhibited a progressive, mosaic pattern of mtDNA depletion in cultured fibroblasts. All these patients had mutations in a catalytic domain in both POLG1 alleles, in either the polymerase or exonuclease domain or both. The tissue mtDNA content of patients who had two linker mutations was normal, and their phenotypes the mildest. Epilepsy and/or movement disorder were major features in all 21. Previous studies have implicated replication stalling as a mechanism for mtDNA depletion. The mosaic cellular depletion that we have demonstrated in cell cultures may be a manifestation of severe replication stalling. One patient with a severe cellular and clinical phenotype was a compound heterozygote with POLG1 mutations in the polymerase and exonuclease domain intrans. This suggests that POLG1 requires both polymerase and 3′–5′ exonuclease activity in the same molecule. This is consistent with current functional models for eukaryotic DNA polymerases, which alternate between polymerizing and editing modes, as determined by competition between these two active sites for the 3′ end of the DNA.
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spelling pubmed-24864412009-02-25 Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations Ashley, Neil O'Rourke, Anthony Smith, Conrad Adams, Susan Gowda, Vasantha Zeviani, Massimo Brown, Garry K. Fratter, Carl Poulton, Joanna Hum Mol Genet Articles We investigated clinical and cellular phenotypes of 24 children with mutations in the catalytic (alpha) subunit of the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) gamma polymerase (POLG1). Twenty-one had Alpers syndrome, the commonest severe POLG1 autosomal recessive phenotype, comprising hepatoencephalopathy and often mtDNA depletion. The cellular mtDNA content reflected the genotype more closely than did clinical features. Patients with tissue depletion of mtDNA all had at least one allele with either a missense mutation in a catalytic domain or a nonsense mutation. Four out of 12 patients exhibited a progressive, mosaic pattern of mtDNA depletion in cultured fibroblasts. All these patients had mutations in a catalytic domain in both POLG1 alleles, in either the polymerase or exonuclease domain or both. The tissue mtDNA content of patients who had two linker mutations was normal, and their phenotypes the mildest. Epilepsy and/or movement disorder were major features in all 21. Previous studies have implicated replication stalling as a mechanism for mtDNA depletion. The mosaic cellular depletion that we have demonstrated in cell cultures may be a manifestation of severe replication stalling. One patient with a severe cellular and clinical phenotype was a compound heterozygote with POLG1 mutations in the polymerase and exonuclease domain intrans. This suggests that POLG1 requires both polymerase and 3′–5′ exonuclease activity in the same molecule. This is consistent with current functional models for eukaryotic DNA polymerases, which alternate between polymerizing and editing modes, as determined by competition between these two active sites for the 3′ end of the DNA. Oxford University Press 2008-08-15 2008-05-16 /pmc/articles/PMC2486441/ /pubmed/18487244 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddn150 Text en © 2008 The Author(s)
spellingShingle Articles
Ashley, Neil
O'Rourke, Anthony
Smith, Conrad
Adams, Susan
Gowda, Vasantha
Zeviani, Massimo
Brown, Garry K.
Fratter, Carl
Poulton, Joanna
Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations
title Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations
title_full Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations
title_fullStr Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations
title_full_unstemmed Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations
title_short Depletion of mitochondrial DNA in fibroblast cultures from patients with POLG1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations
title_sort depletion of mitochondrial dna in fibroblast cultures from patients with polg1 mutations is a consequence of catalytic mutations
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2486441/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18487244
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddn150
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