4.6 Review

Mitochondrial diabetes mellitus

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENDOCRINOLOGICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 25, Issue 5, Pages 477-484

Publisher

EDITRICE KURTIS S R L
DOI: 10.1007/BF03344042

Keywords

mitochondrion; diabetes; mutation; MIDD; mtDNA; deafness; 3243

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This review discusses the current insight by which mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) contribute to the development of particular disease states with emphasis on diabetes mellitus. Mitochondria are the power factories of the cells and produce ATP by oxidizing reducing equivalents via the respiratory chain. These reducing equivalents originate mainly from the citric acid cycle that also occurs within the mitochondria. Human mitochondria contain their own genetic material in the form of circular DNA that encodes for only a fraction of the mitochondrial components. The other mitochondrial components are nuclear encoded. Pathogenic mutations in mtDNA can affect the activity of the respiratory chain, thereby leading to the reduced generation of ATP. However, mitochondria not only produce ATP but they also regulate cytosolic concentrations of signaling molecules such as calcium and iron ions. The metabolic processes within mitochondria such as the citric acid cycle determine the concentration of metabolites that can also act as signalling molecules. Furthermore, the respiratory chain and mitochondrion-associated monoamine oxidase are major producers of reactive oxygen radicals. As a result, mutations in mtDNA can deregulate multiple processes within cells and the balance of this deregulation may contribute to the clinical phenotype.

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