Mitochondrial Genetics Flashcards

1
Q

What are mitochondria?

A
  • organelles found in nucleated cells (not RBCs)
  • regulate energy production, calcium homeostasis, apoptosis, radical species generation and scavenging, steroid biosynthesis, orchestrating metabolism
  • move and distribute within cells via cellular cytoskeleton
    undergo fission and fusion
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2
Q

Mitochondrial DNA

A
  • ~16,500bp
  • double-stranded circle
  • 37 genes and no introns
  • genes encode for protein structures involved in oxidative phosphorylation, rRNAs, and tRNAs
  • no homologous recombination or meiosis
  • replication continuous and not synchronized with cell cycle
  • more prone to errors and mutations in replication than nuclear DNA
  • multiple copies per cell depending on energy needs
  • maternally inherited; mtDNA haplogroups can influence clinical spectrum of disease
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3
Q

Heteroplasmy vs Homoplasmy

A
  • cells can have different proportions of mutated and normal/wild-type mtDNA
  • heteroplasmy means not all mtDNA in the cell is the same
  • homoplasmy means all of the mtDNA is the same (whether 100% normal or 100% mutated)
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4
Q

Threshold Effect

A
  • for an individual to express symptoms of disease, the amount of mutated mtDNA must exceed a certain threshold
  • tissues like brain and muscle have lower thresholds because of higher energy requirements
  • amount of mutated mtDNA present can influence disease severity
  • a lot of mutated mtDNA may mean severe disease, moderate level of mtDNA means more mild manifestation
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5
Q

Bottleneck Effect

A
  • if maternal oocyte has mutated mtDNA, some may end up in egg cell that goes on to be fertilized and form embryo
  • mtDNA that ends up in embryo is a random sample of all maternal mtDNA
  • as embryo divides and more cells generated, random sampling of mtDNA also happens and some tissues may end up with higher concentrations of mutated mtDNA than others
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6
Q

Mitochondrial Disease Recurrence Risks

A
  • mtDNA point mutations: 1-4% for full sibs when no symptoms in mom; up to 50% for sons/daughters if mom affected, no risk from affected male to children
  • mtDNA del/dups: up to 50% for full sibs
    and children whether or not mom affected, no risk from affected male to children
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7
Q

Mitochondrial Disease Red Flags

A
  • males affected and linked through related females in pedigree
  • neurological: encephalomyopathy, cognitive decline in young person, basal ganglia lesions, SNHL, stroke-like event w/o vascular pattern, exercise intolerance, epilepsia partialis continua (EPC), myoclonus, ataxia
  • ophthalmologic: ptsosis, PEO, pigmentary retinopathy, night blindness, optic atrophy, color vision loss
  • cardiac: cardiomyopathy, cardiac conduction block, WPW
  • blood: Pearson’s syndrome
  • GI: hepatic steatosis, dysphagia, dysmotility, pseudo-obstruction
  • endocrine: diabetes
  • renal: Fanconi syndrome
  • other: short/thin habitus, hypotonia, FTT, lactic acidosis, anesthesia sensitivity, valproate sensitivity
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8
Q

Testing for Mitochondrial Diseases

A
  • biochemical: lactate levels (high), plasma/CSF amino acids (high alanine), urine organic acids (TCA intermediates), plasma acylcarnitine (low carnitine, elevated acyl)
  • imaging studies: brain MRI (Leigh syndrome), brain MRS (high lactate, low NAA)
  • tissue biopsy: skeletal muscle (ragged red fibers, COX-deficient fibers, high number of mitochondria, ETC activity, CoQ10, mtDNA analysis); liver (ETC acitivity, mtDNA analysis); skin (ETC activity, mtDNA analysis, fibroblast cell line)
  • molecular testing: mtDNA sequencing (NGS detects heteroplasmy >1.2%; Sanger detects heteroplasmy >50%), nuclear gene sequencing (symptoms can mimic other conditions), exome (diagnosis in 50% of patients)
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9
Q

Treatment for Mitochondrial Diseases

A
  • no FDA approved therapies
  • supplemental cocktails (CoQ10, cofactors, arginine, enzyme activators, antioxidants)
  • avoid drugs with mitochondrial toxicity
  • exercise increases non-mutated mtDNA
  • clinical trials
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10
Q

Management for Mitochondrial Diseases

A
  • treat symptoms
  • minimize intercurrent illnesses (get vaccines)
  • avoid fasting
  • be careful with anesthesia
  • arginine and citrulline therapy for neurologic change
  • mitochondrial replacement therapy (spindle or pronuclear transfer; not approved in US)
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11
Q

Of the 5 protein complexes involved in oxidative phosphorylation, which one only contains proteins made from nDNA?

A

Complex II

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12
Q

Mitochondrial diseases with immediate onset after birth are most likely to be caused by…

A

AR nDNA mutations

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13
Q

Mitochondrial disease with later onset are most likely caused by…

A

mtDNA mutations

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