4.6 Article

Succinyl-CoA Ligase Deficiency: A Mitochondrial Hepatoencephalomyopathy

Journal

PEDIATRIC RESEARCH
Volume 68, Issue 2, Pages 159-164

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1203/PDR.0b013e3181e5c3a4

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (Cholestatic Liver Disease Consortium) [U54 DK078377]
  2. National Institutes of Health (Cholestatic Liver Disease Research and Education Network) [U01 DK062453]

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This patient presented on the first day of life with pronounced lactic acidosis with an elevated lactate/pyruvate ratio. Urine organic acids showed Krebs cycle metabolites and mildly elevated methylmalonate and methylcitrate. The acylcarnitine profile showed elevated propionylcarnitine and succinylcarnitine. Amino acids showed elevated glutamic acid, glutamine, proline, and alanine. From the age 2 of mo on, she had elevated transaminases and intermittent episodes of liver failure. Liver biopsy showed steatosis and a decrease of mitochondrial DNA to 50% of control. She had bilateral sensorineural hearing loss. Over the course of the first 2 y of life, she developed a progressively severe myopathy with pronounced muscle weakness eventually leading to respiratory failure, Leigh disease, and recurrent hepatic failure. The hepatic symptoms and the metabolic parameters temporarily improved on treatment with aspartate, but neither muscle symptoms nor brain lesions improved. Laboratory testing revealed a deficiency of succinyl-CoA ligase enzyme activity and protein in fibroblasts because of a novel homozygous mutation in the SUCLG1 gene: c.40A>T (p.M14L). Functional analysis suggests that this methionine is more likely to function as the translation initiator methionine, explaining the pathogenic nature of the mutation. Succinyl-CoA ligase deficiency due to an SUCLG1 mutation is a new cause for mitochondrial hepatoencephalomyopathy. (Pediatr Res 68: 159-164, 2010)

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