A novel MT-CO2 variant causing cerebellar ataxia and neuropathy: The role of muscle biopsy in diagnosis and defining pathogenicity

•Non-syndromic presentations of mtDNA-related adult disease are diagnostically challenging.•Access to diagnostic muscle biopsies from the patient and his clinically-unaffected mother were essential in defining which of two heteroplasmic MT-CO2 variants identified through mitochondrial DNA sequencing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuromuscular disorders : NMD 2021-11, Vol.31 (11), p.1186-1193
Hauptverfasser: Baty, Karen, Farrugia, Maria E., Hopton, Sila, Falkous, Gavin, Schaefer, Andrew M., Stewart, William, Willison, Hugh J., Reilly, Mary M., Blakely, Emma L., Taylor, Robert W., Ng, Yi Shiau
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Non-syndromic presentations of mtDNA-related adult disease are diagnostically challenging.•Access to diagnostic muscle biopsies from the patient and his clinically-unaffected mother were essential in defining which of two heteroplasmic MT-CO2 variants identified through mitochondrial DNA sequencing were causal.•Muscle biopsy remains a vital diagnostic investigation in the era of next generation sequencing. Pathogenic variants in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are associated with significant clinical heterogeneity with neuromuscular involvement commonly reported. Non-syndromic presentations of mtDNA disease continue to pose a diagnostic challenge and with genomic testing still necessitating a muscle biopsy in many cases. Here we describe an adult patient who presented with progressive ataxia, neuropathy and exercise intolerance in whom the application of numerous Mendelian gene panels had failed to make a genetic diagnosis. Muscle biopsy revealed characteristic mitochondrial pathology (cytochrome c oxidase deficient, ragged-red fibers) prompting a thorough investigation of the mitochondrial genome. Two heteroplasmic MT-CO2 gene variants (NC_012920.1: m.7887G>A and m.8250G>A) were identified, necessitating single fiber segregation and familial studies – including the biopsy of the patient's clinically-unaffected mother - to demonstrate pathogenicity of the novel m.7887G>A p.(Gly101Asp) variant and establishing this as the cause of the mitochondrial biochemical defects and clinical presentation. In the era of high throughput whole exome and genome sequencing, muscle biopsy remains a key investigation in the diagnosis of patients with non-syndromic presentations of adult-onset mitochondrial disease and fully defining the pathogenicity of novel mtDNA variants.
ISSN:0960-8966
1873-2364
DOI:10.1016/j.nmd.2021.05.014