DiMauro S, Moraes C T
H. Houston Merritt Clinical Research Center for Muscular Dystrophy and Related Diseases, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY.
Arch Neurol. 1993 Nov;50(11):1197-208. doi: 10.1001/archneur.1993.00540110075008.
Mitochondrial diseases are uniquely interesting from a genetic point of view because mitochondria contain their own DNA (mtDNA) and are capable of synthesizing a small but vital set of proteins, all of which are components of respiratory chain complexes. Numerous mutations in mtDNA have been described in the past 5 years, and, it is, therefore, important for the clinician to keep in mind both some characteristic clinical presentations and, more importantly, some basic principles of "mitochondrial genetics," including heteroplasmy, the threshold effect, mitotic segregation, and maternal inheritance. The vast majority of mitochondrial proteins are encoded by nuclear DNA (nDNA) and have to be imported from the cytoplasm into mitochondria through a complex translocation machinery, which is also under the control of the nuclear genome. In addition, nDNA encodes several factors that control mtDNA replication, transcription, and translocation. Mitochondrial diseases due to mutations in nDNA are transmitted as mendelian traits and fall into three categories: (1) alterations of mitochondrial proteins; (2) alterations of mitochondrial protein importation; and (3) alterations of intergenomic communication. The first group of disorders can be further classified on the basis of the biochemical area affected, including defects of transport, defects of substrate utilization, defects of the Krebs cycle, defects of oxidation/phosphorylation coupling, and defects of the respiratory chain. The second group includes only few well-documented disorders but will certainly expand in the near future. The third group includes two conditions, an autosomal dominant form of progressive external ophthalmoplegia associated with multiple mtDNA deletions, and a quantitative defect of mtDNA (mtDNA depletion) causing severe infantile myopathy or hepatopathy.
从遗传学角度来看,线粒体疾病极具研究价值,因为线粒体含有自身的DNA(mtDNA),并且能够合成一小部分但至关重要的蛋白质,所有这些蛋白质都是呼吸链复合物的组成部分。在过去5年里,已发现mtDNA存在大量突变,因此,临床医生必须牢记一些典型的临床表现,更重要的是,一些“线粒体遗传学”的基本原理,包括异质性、阈值效应、有丝分裂分离和母系遗传。绝大多数线粒体蛋白质由核DNA(nDNA)编码,必须通过复杂的转运机制从细胞质导入线粒体,而该转运机制也受核基因组的控制。此外,nDNA编码多种控制mtDNA复制、转录和转运的因子。由nDNA突变引起的线粒体疾病按孟德尔遗传方式传递,可分为三类:(1)线粒体蛋白质改变;(2)线粒体蛋白质导入改变;(3)基因组间通讯改变。第一类疾病可根据受影响的生化领域进一步分类,包括转运缺陷、底物利用缺陷、三羧酸循环缺陷、氧化/磷酸化偶联缺陷和呼吸链缺陷。第二类仅包括少数有充分文献记载的疾病,但在不久的将来肯定会有所增加。第三类包括两种情况,一种是与多个mtDNA缺失相关的常染色体显性进行性眼外肌麻痹,另一种是导致严重婴儿肌病或肝病的mtDNA定量缺陷(mtDNA耗竭)。