Abstract
Single, large-scale deletions of mitochondrial DNA are a common cause of mitochondrial disease and cause a broad phenotypic spectrum ranging from mild myopathy to devastating multi-system syndromes such as Kearns-Sayre syndrome. Studies to date have been inconsistent on the value of putative predictors of clinical phenotype and disease progression such as mutation load and the size or location of the deletion. Using a cohort of 87 patients with single, large-scale mitochondrial DNA deletions we demonstrate that a variety of outcome measures such as COX-deficient fibre density, age-at-onset of symptoms and progression of disease burden, as measured by the Newcastle Mitochondrial Disease Adult Scale, are significantly (P < 0.05) correlated with the size of the deletion, the deletion heteroplasmy level in skeletal muscle, and the location of the deletion within the genome. We validate these findings with re-analysis of 256 cases from published data and clarify the previously conflicting information of the value of these predictors, identifying that multiple regression analysis is necessary to understand the effect of these interrelated predictors. Furthermore, we have used mixed modelling techniques to model the progression of disease according to these predictors, allowing a better understanding of the progression over time of this strikingly variable disease. In this way we have developed a new paradigm in clinical mitochondrial disease assessment and management that sidesteps the perennial difficulty of ascribing a discrete clinical phenotype to a broad multi-dimensional and progressive spectrum of disease, establishing a framework to allow better understanding of disease progression.
Highlights
Mitochondrial genetic defects are an important cause of neurological disease and are a result of mutations of either the nuclear or mitochondrial genome (McFarland et al, 2010; Schon et al., 2012)
As the inclusion of MT-CO genes within the deleted mitochondrial DNA region was significantly correlated with a larger mitochondrial DNA deletion size in both our cohort and the meta-analysis, we examined whether there was a correlation between mitochondrial DNA deletion size and c oxidase (COX)-deficient fibre density
The relationship between a specific mitochondrial DNA mutation and clinical phenotype and progression is complex for many common mitochondrial DNA mutations not least because of heteroplasmy and variation in mitochondrial DNA mutation load
Summary
Mitochondrial genetic defects are an important cause of neurological disease and are a result of mutations of either the nuclear or mitochondrial genome (McFarland et al, 2010; Schon et al., 2012). The ability to understand and predict the progression of mitochondrial disease is of great clinical importance to give patients guidance about their risk of developing symptoms and enabling clinicians to provide optimum patient care.
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