Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathies: the Enigma of Genotype Versus Phenotype
Overview
Biophysics
Authors
Affiliations
Over the past decade a large body of evidence has accumulated implicating defects of human mitochondrial DNA in the pathogenesis of a group of disorders known collectively as the mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. Although impaired oxidative phosphorylation is likely to represent the final common pathway leading to cellular dysfunction in these diseases, fundamental issues still remain elusive. Perhaps the most challenging of these is to understand the mechanisms which underlie the complex relationship between genotype and phenotype. Here we examine this relationship and discuss some of the factors which are likely to be involved.
Sawant N, Morton H, Kshirsagar S, Reddy A, Reddy P Mol Neurobiol. 2021; 58(12):6350-6377.
PMID: 34519969 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-021-02556-x.
Pacitti D, Levene M, Garone C, Nirmalananthan N, Bax B Front Genet. 2019; 9:669.
PMID: 30627136 PMC: 6309918. DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2018.00669.
Wu S, Ma Y, Wu Y, Chen Y, Wei Y Mol Neurobiol. 2010; 41(2-3):256-66.
PMID: 20411357 DOI: 10.1007/s12035-010-8123-7.
Mitochondria and energetic depression in cell pathophysiology.
Seppet E, Gruno M, Peetsalu A, Gizatullina Z, Nguyen H, Vielhaber S Int J Mol Sci. 2009; 10(5):2252-2303.
PMID: 19564950 PMC: 2695278. DOI: 10.3390/ijms10052252.
Evidence of cardiovascular autonomic impairment in mitochondrial disorders.
di Leo R, Musumeci O, de Gregorio C, Recupero A, Grimaldi P, Messina C J Neurol. 2007; 254(11):1498-503.
PMID: 17987253 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-007-0536-5.