Abstract

The quantification of mitochondrial enzyme activities in skeletal muscle samples of patients suspected of having mitochondrial myopathies is problematic. Therefore, we have evaluated different methods for the determination of activities cytochrome c oxidase and NADH:CoQ oxidoreductase in human skeletal muscle samples. The measurement of cytochrome c oxidase activity in the presence of 200 μM ferrocytochrome c and the detection of NADH:CoQ oxidoreductase as rotenone-sensitive NADH:CoQ1 reductase resulted in comparable citrate synthase-normalized respiratory chain enzyme activities of both isolated mitochondria and homogenates from control human skeletal muscle samples. These methods allowed the precise detection of deficiencies of respiratory chain enzymes in skeletal muscle of two patients harboring only 20 and 27% of deleted mitochondrial DNA, respectively. Therefore, citrate synthase-normalized respiratory chain activities can serve as stable reference values for the determination of a putative mitochondrial defect in human skeletal muscle.

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