1. Academic Validation
  2. The first nuclear-encoded complex I mutation in a patient with Leigh syndrome

The first nuclear-encoded complex I mutation in a patient with Leigh syndrome

  • Am J Hum Genet. 1998 Dec;63(6):1598-608. doi: 10.1086/302154.
J Loeffen 1 J Smeitink R Triepels R Smeets M Schuelke R Sengers F Trijbels B Hamel R Mullaart L van den Heuvel
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Pediatrics, Nijmegen Center for Mitochondrial Disorders, The Netherlands.
PMID: 9837812 DOI: 10.1086/302154
Abstract

Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH):ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is the largest multiprotein Enzyme complex of the respiratory chain. The nuclear-encoded NDUFS8 (TYKY) subunit of complex I is highly conserved among eukaryotes and prokaryotes and contains two 4Fe4S ferredoxin consensus patterns, which have long been thought to provide the binding site for the iron-sulfur cluster N-2. The NDUFS8 cDNA contains an open reading frame of 633 bp, coding for 210 Amino acids. Cycle sequencing of amplified NDUFS8 cDNA of 20 patients with isolated enzymatic complex I deficiency revealed two compound heterozygous transitions in a patient with neuropathologically proven Leigh syndrome. The first mutation was a C236T (P79L), and the second mutation was a G305A (R102H). Both mutations were absent in 70 control alleles and cosegregated within the family. A progressive clinical phenotype proceeding to death in the first months of life was expressed in the patient. In the 19 other patients with enzymatic complex I deficiency, no mutations were found in the NDUFS8 cDNA. This article describes the first molecular genetic link between a nuclear-encoded subunit of complex I and Leigh syndrome.

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