Mutation of a nuclear succinate dehydrogenase gene results in mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiency.

Article Details

Citation

Bourgeron T, Rustin P, Chretien D, Birch-Machin M, Bourgeois M, Viegas-Pequignot E, Munnich A, Rotig A

Mutation of a nuclear succinate dehydrogenase gene results in mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiency.

Nat Genet. 1995 Oct;11(2):144-9.

PubMed ID
7550341 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

We now report a mutation in the nuclear-encoded flavoprotein (Fp) subunit gene of the succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) in two siblings with complex II deficiency presenting as Leigh syndrome. Both patients were homozygous for an Arg554Trp substitution in the Fp subunit. Their parents (first cousins) were heterozygous for the mutation that occurred in a conserved domain of the protein and was absent from 120 controls. The deleterious effect of the Arg to Trp substitution on the catalytic activity of SDH was observed in a SDH- yeast strain transformed with mutant Fp cDNA. The Fp subunit gene is duplicated in the human genome (3q29; 5p15), with only the gene on chromosome 5 expressed in human-hamster somatic cell hybrids. This is the first report of a nuclear gene mutation causing a mitochondrial respiratory chain deficiency in humans.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Succinate dehydrogenase [ubiquinone] flavoprotein subunit, mitochondrialP31040Details