Identification of a gene causing human cytochrome <i>c</i> oxidase deficiency by integrative genomics

Vamsi K. Mootha(McGill Genome Centre), Patricia Lepage(McGill Genome Centre), Kathleen A. Miller(McGill Genome Centre), Jakob Bunkenborg(McGill Genome Centre), Michael Reich(McGill Genome Centre), Majbrit Hjerrild(McGill Genome Centre), Terrye Delmonte(McGill Genome Centre), Amélie Villeneuve(McGill Genome Centre), Robert Sladek(McGill Genome Centre), Fenghao Xu(McGill Genome Centre), Grant A. Mitchell(McGill Genome Centre), Charles Morin(McGill Genome Centre), Matthias Mann(McGill Genome Centre), Thomas J. Hudson(McGill Genome Centre), Brian Robinson(McGill Genome Centre), John D. Rioux(McGill Genome Centre), Eric S. Lander(McGill Genome Centre)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 14, 2003
Cited by 571

Abstract

Identifying the genes responsible for human diseases requires combining information about gene position with clues about biological function. The recent availability of whole-genome data sets of RNA and protein expression provides powerful new sources of functional insight. Here we illustrate how such data sets can expedite disease-gene discovery, by using them to identify the gene causing Leigh syndrome, French-Canadian type (LSFC, Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man no. 220111), a human cytochrome c oxidase deficiency that maps to chromosome 2p16-21. Using four public RNA expression data sets, we assigned to all human genes a "score" reflecting their similarity in RNA-expression profiles to known mitochondrial genes. Using a large survey of organellar proteomics, we similarly classified human genes according to the likelihood of their protein product being associated with the mitochondrion. By intersecting this information with the relevant genomic region, we identified a single clear candidate gene, LRPPRC. Resequencing identified two mutations on two independent haplotypes, providing definitive genetic proof that LRPPRC indeed causes LSFC. LRPPRC encodes an mRNA-binding protein likely involved with mtDNA transcript processing, suggesting an additional mechanism of mitochondrial pathophysiology. Similar strategies to integrate diverse genomic information can be applied likewise to other disease pathways and will become increasingly powerful with the growing wealth of diverse, functional genomics data.


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