Peroxisomal and Mitochondrial Defects in the Cerebro-Hepato-Renal Syndrome

Sidney Goldfischer(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Cyril L. Moore(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Toby Johnson(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Alfred J. Spiro(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Marius P. Valsamis(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Henry K. Wisniewski(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Robert H. Ritch(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), William T. Norton(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Isabelle Rapin(Albert Einstein College of Medicine), Lawrence M. Gartner(Albert Einstein College of Medicine)
Science
October 5, 1973
Cited by 792

Abstract

The cerebro-hepato-renal syndrome is a rare familial malady with cerebral, renal, and skeletal abnormalities, severe hypotonia, cirrhosis, iron and lipid storage, and death within 6 months. Correlated electron microscopic, histochemical, and biochemical studies demonstrate defects in two oxidative organelles. Peroxisomes cannot be found in hepatocytes and renal proximal tubules. In hepatocytes and cortical astrocytes, mitochondria are distorted in their appearance and glycogen stores are increased. Oxygen consumnption of brain and liver mitochondrial preparations with succinate and with substrates reducing nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide is markedly diminished, but the consumption is normal with ascorbate and tetramethylphenylenediamine, which suggests a defect in electron transport prior to the cytochromes. Histochemical studies of mitochondrial oxidation point to a defect between the succinate dehydrogenase flavoprotein and coenzyme Q, possibly in the region of nonheme iron protein.


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