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Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency

Leigh syndrome is one of the most common neurological phenotypes observed in pediatric mitochondrial disease presentations. It is characterized by symmetrical lesions found on neuroimaging in the basal ganglia, thalamus, and brainstem and by a loss of motor skills and delayed developmental milestone...

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Autores principales: Alston, Charlotte L., Veling, Mike T., Heidler, Juliana, Taylor, Lucie S., Alaimo, Joseph T., Sung, Andrew Y., He, Langping, Hopton, Sila, Broomfield, Alexander, Pavaine, Julija, Diaz, Jullianne, Leon, Eyby, Wolf, Philipp, McFarland, Robert, Prokisch, Holger, Wortmann, Saskia B., Bonnen, Penelope E., Wittig, Ilka, Pagliarini, David J., Taylor, Robert W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7042492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31866046
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.12.001
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author Alston, Charlotte L.
Veling, Mike T.
Heidler, Juliana
Taylor, Lucie S.
Alaimo, Joseph T.
Sung, Andrew Y.
He, Langping
Hopton, Sila
Broomfield, Alexander
Pavaine, Julija
Diaz, Jullianne
Leon, Eyby
Wolf, Philipp
McFarland, Robert
Prokisch, Holger
Wortmann, Saskia B.
Bonnen, Penelope E.
Wittig, Ilka
Pagliarini, David J.
Taylor, Robert W.
author_facet Alston, Charlotte L.
Veling, Mike T.
Heidler, Juliana
Taylor, Lucie S.
Alaimo, Joseph T.
Sung, Andrew Y.
He, Langping
Hopton, Sila
Broomfield, Alexander
Pavaine, Julija
Diaz, Jullianne
Leon, Eyby
Wolf, Philipp
McFarland, Robert
Prokisch, Holger
Wortmann, Saskia B.
Bonnen, Penelope E.
Wittig, Ilka
Pagliarini, David J.
Taylor, Robert W.
author_sort Alston, Charlotte L.
collection PubMed
description Leigh syndrome is one of the most common neurological phenotypes observed in pediatric mitochondrial disease presentations. It is characterized by symmetrical lesions found on neuroimaging in the basal ganglia, thalamus, and brainstem and by a loss of motor skills and delayed developmental milestones. Genetic diagnosis of Leigh syndrome is complicated on account of the vast genetic heterogeneity with >75 candidate disease-associated genes having been reported to date. Candidate genes are still emerging, being identified when “omics” tools (genomics, proteomics, and transcriptomics) are applied to manipulated cell lines and cohorts of clinically characterized individuals who lack a genetic diagnosis. NDUFAF8 is one such protein; it has been found to interact with the well-characterized complex I (CI) assembly factor NDUFAF5 in a large-scale protein-protein interaction screen. Diagnostic next-generation sequencing has identified three unrelated pediatric subjects, each with a clinical diagnosis of Leigh syndrome, who harbor bi-allelic pathogenic variants in NDUFAF8. These variants include a recurrent splicing variant that was initially overlooked due to its deep-intronic location. Subject fibroblasts were found to express a complex I deficiency, and lentiviral transduction with wild-type NDUFAF8-cDNA ameliorated both the assembly defect and the biochemical deficiency. Complexome profiling of subject fibroblasts demonstrated a complex I assembly defect, and the stalled assembly intermediates corroborate the role of NDUFAF8 in early complex I assembly. This report serves to expand the genetic heterogeneity associated with Leigh syndrome and to validate the clinical utility of orphan protein characterization. We also highlight the importance of evaluating intronic sequence when a single, definitively pathogenic variant is identified during diagnostic testing.
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spelling pubmed-70424922020-07-02 Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency Alston, Charlotte L. Veling, Mike T. Heidler, Juliana Taylor, Lucie S. Alaimo, Joseph T. Sung, Andrew Y. He, Langping Hopton, Sila Broomfield, Alexander Pavaine, Julija Diaz, Jullianne Leon, Eyby Wolf, Philipp McFarland, Robert Prokisch, Holger Wortmann, Saskia B. Bonnen, Penelope E. Wittig, Ilka Pagliarini, David J. Taylor, Robert W. Am J Hum Genet Report Leigh syndrome is one of the most common neurological phenotypes observed in pediatric mitochondrial disease presentations. It is characterized by symmetrical lesions found on neuroimaging in the basal ganglia, thalamus, and brainstem and by a loss of motor skills and delayed developmental milestones. Genetic diagnosis of Leigh syndrome is complicated on account of the vast genetic heterogeneity with >75 candidate disease-associated genes having been reported to date. Candidate genes are still emerging, being identified when “omics” tools (genomics, proteomics, and transcriptomics) are applied to manipulated cell lines and cohorts of clinically characterized individuals who lack a genetic diagnosis. NDUFAF8 is one such protein; it has been found to interact with the well-characterized complex I (CI) assembly factor NDUFAF5 in a large-scale protein-protein interaction screen. Diagnostic next-generation sequencing has identified three unrelated pediatric subjects, each with a clinical diagnosis of Leigh syndrome, who harbor bi-allelic pathogenic variants in NDUFAF8. These variants include a recurrent splicing variant that was initially overlooked due to its deep-intronic location. Subject fibroblasts were found to express a complex I deficiency, and lentiviral transduction with wild-type NDUFAF8-cDNA ameliorated both the assembly defect and the biochemical deficiency. Complexome profiling of subject fibroblasts demonstrated a complex I assembly defect, and the stalled assembly intermediates corroborate the role of NDUFAF8 in early complex I assembly. This report serves to expand the genetic heterogeneity associated with Leigh syndrome and to validate the clinical utility of orphan protein characterization. We also highlight the importance of evaluating intronic sequence when a single, definitively pathogenic variant is identified during diagnostic testing. Elsevier 2020-01-02 2019-12-19 /pmc/articles/PMC7042492/ /pubmed/31866046 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.12.001 Text en © 2019 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Report
Alston, Charlotte L.
Veling, Mike T.
Heidler, Juliana
Taylor, Lucie S.
Alaimo, Joseph T.
Sung, Andrew Y.
He, Langping
Hopton, Sila
Broomfield, Alexander
Pavaine, Julija
Diaz, Jullianne
Leon, Eyby
Wolf, Philipp
McFarland, Robert
Prokisch, Holger
Wortmann, Saskia B.
Bonnen, Penelope E.
Wittig, Ilka
Pagliarini, David J.
Taylor, Robert W.
Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency
title Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency
title_full Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency
title_fullStr Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency
title_full_unstemmed Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency
title_short Pathogenic Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFAF8 Cause Leigh Syndrome with an Isolated Complex I Deficiency
title_sort pathogenic bi-allelic mutations in ndufaf8 cause leigh syndrome with an isolated complex i deficiency
topic Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7042492/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31866046
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2019.12.001
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