Abstract

Neurogenic muscle weakness, ataxia, and retinitis pigmentosa (NARP) is caused by m.8993T>G/C mutations in the mitochondrial adenosine triphosphate synthase subunit 6 gene (MT-ATP6). Traditionally, heteroplasmy levels between 70% and 90% lead to NARP, and >90% result in Leigh syndrome. In this study we report a 30-year-old man with NARP and m.8993T>G in MT-ATP6. Although the patient carried the mutation in homoplasmic state in blood with similarly high levels in urine (94%) and buccal swab (92%), he presented with NARP and not the expected, more severe Leigh phenotype. The mutation could not be detected in any of the 3 analyzed tissues of the mother, indicating a large genetic shift between mother and offspring. Nerve biopsy revealed peculiar endoneurial Schwann cell nuclear accumulations, clusters of concentrically arranged Schwann cells devoid of myelinated axons, and degenerated mitochondria. We emphasize the phenotypic variability of the m.8993T>G MT-ATP6 mutation and the need for caution in predictive counseling in such patients. Muscle Nerve 54: 328-333, 2016.

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