Mitochondrial dysfunction in <i>mut</i> methylmalonic acidemia

Randy J. Chandler(National Institutes of Health), Patricia M. Zerfas(National Institutes of Health), Sara Shanske(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Jennifer L. Sloan(National Institutes of Health), Victoria Hoffmann(National Institutes of Health), Salvatore DiMauro(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Charles P. Venditti(National Institutes of Health)
The FASEB Journal
December 16, 2008
Cited by 195Open Access
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Abstract

Methylmalonic acidemia is an autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism caused by defective activity of methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MUT) that exhibits multiorgan system pathology. To examine whether mitochondrial dysfunction is a feature of this organic acidemia, a background-modified Mut-knockout mouse model was constructed and used to examine mitochondrial ultrastructure and respiratory chain function in the tissues that manifest pathology in humans. In parallel, the liver from a patient with mut methylmalonic acidemia was studied in a similar fashion. Megamitochondria formed early in life in the hepatocytes of the Mut(-/-) animals and progressively enlarged. Liver extracts prepared from the mutants at multiple time points displayed respiratory chain dysfunction, with diminished cytochrome c oxidase activity and reduced intracellular glutathione compared to control littermates. Over time, the exocrine pancreas and proximal tubules of the kidney also exhibited megamitochondria, and older mutant mice eventually developed tubulointerstitial renal disease. The patient liver displayed similar morphological and enzymatic findings as observed in the murine tissues. These murine and human studies establish that megamitochondria formation with respiratory chain dysfunction occur in a tissue-specific fashion in methylmalonic acidemia and suggest treatment approaches based on improving mitochondrial function and ameliorating the effects of oxidative stress.


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