4.7 Article

Bi-allelic Mutations in NDUFA6 Establish Its Role in Early-Onset Isolated Mitochondrial Complex I Deficiency

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 103, Issue 4, Pages 592-601

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2018.08.013

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Centre for Mitochondrial Research [203105/Z/16/Z]
  2. MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Diseases [G0601943]
  3. NIHR Biomedical Research Centre in Age and Age Related Diseases award
  4. Newcastle Molecular Pathology Node
  5. NHS Highly Specialised Service for Rare Mitochondrial Disorders
  6. Lily Foundation
  7. Georg August University Gottingen Faculty of Medicine research program
  8. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 815, GA354/14-1]
  9. Centre of Mitochondrial Biology and Pathology (Czech Science Foundation) [14-36804G]
  10. German Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung through the German Network for Mitochondrial Disorders (mitoNET) [01GM1113]
  11. E-Rare project GENOMIT [01GM1603, I 2741-B26]
  12. EU Horizon2020 Collaborative Research Project SOUND [633974]
  13. Wellcome Trust [090532/Z/09/Z, 0948685/Z/10/Z]
  14. NIHR Biomedical Research Centre Oxford
  15. NIHR doctoral fellowship [NIHR-HCS-D12-03-04]
  16. MRC [MR/J010448/1]
  17. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [1125390]
  18. Australian Mitochondrial Disease Foundation
  19. Austrian Science Fonds
  20. Rosetrees Trust
  21. Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre
  22. NIHR BioResource [RG65966]
  23. MRC [MR/K000608/1, G0800674, G0601943] Funding Source: UKRI

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Isolated complex I deficiency is a common biochemical phenotype observed in pediatric mitochondrial disease and often arises as a consequence of pathogenic variants affecting one of the similar to 65 genes encoding the complex I structural subunits or assembly factors. Such genetic heterogeneity means that application of next-generation sequencing technologies to undiagnosed cohorts has been a catalyst for genetic diagnosis and gene-disease associations. We describe the clinical and molecular genetic investigations of four unrelated children who presented with neuroradiological findings and/or elevated lactate levels, highly suggestive of an underlying mitochondrial diagnosis. Next-generation sequencing identified bi-allelic variants in NDUFA6, encoding a 15 kDa LYR-motif-containing complex I subunit that forms part of the Q-module. Functional investigations using subjects' fibroblast cell lines demonstrated complex I assembly defects, which were characterized in detail by mass-spectrometry-based complexome profiling. This confirmed a marked reduction in incorporated NDUFA6 and a concomitant reduction in other Q-module subunits, including NDUFAB1, NDUFA7, and NDUFA12. Lentiviral transduction of subjects' fibroblasts showed normalization of complex I. These data also support supercomplex formation, whereby the similar to 830 kDa complex I intermediate (consisting of the P- and Q-modules) is in complex with assembled complex III and IV holoenzymes despite lacking the N-module. Interestingly, RNA-sequencing data provided evidence that the consensus RefSeq accession number does not correspond to the predominant transcript in clinically relevant tissues, prompting revision of the NDUFA6 RefSeq transcript and highlighting not only the importance of thorough variant interpretation but also the assessment of appropriate transcripts for analysis.

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