Abstract

Recent studies show that patients presenting with cytochrome oxidase (COX) deficiency in infancy may have reduced mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in muscle. The human mitochondrial transcription factor A (h-mtTFA) may be an important regulator of both transcription and replication of mtDNA. h-mtTFA levels were investigated in cell lines which were either free of mtDNA (rho 0) or temporarily depleted by treatment with dideoxycytidine (ddC), and in tissue from three patients with mtDNA depletion and cytochrome oxidase deficiency. h-mtTFA was compared with other mitochondrial proteins such as pyruvate dehydrogenase and porin by Western blotting. The ratio of mtDNA and h-mtTFA mRNA to reference nuclear probes was measured by dual labelling of dot blots. The ratio of mtDNA to nuclear DNA in skeletal muscle was low in muscle in the three patients and in other tissues in one. h-mtTFA was low in cells depleted either permanently or transiently of mtDNA, and this reduction in h-mtTFA roughly paralleled mtDNA levels. Similarly, treatment of rho 0 cell lines with ddC induced a reduction in mtDNA as well as h-mtTFA protein. The relationship between h-mtTFA and mtDNA levels suggests that they may be causally linked. MtDNA depletion was accompanied by an increase in the level of h-mtTFA RNA in the cell lines but low levels in the patient. This suggests that either h-mtTFA regulates mtDNA levels, or that h-mtTFA expression may be regulated by a feedback mechanism initiated by MtDNA Depletion.

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