Respiratory chain defects in the mitochondria of cultured skin fibroblasts from three patients with lacticacidemia

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Abstract

The cultured skin fibroblasts from three patients with lacticacidemia were found to have low rates of 1-[14C]pyruvate oxidation in the face of normal pyruvate dehydrogenase activity. After incubation with 1 mM glucose, these three cell strains also exhibited lactate/pyruvate ratios which were three times greater than those of controls. In two of the patients, both ATP and oxygen consumption in fibroblast mitochondrial preparations was deficient with NAD-linked substrates but normal with succinate and ascorbate/N'N'N'N' tetramethyl phenylene diamine. In the third patient, ATP synthesis in mitochondrial preparations was deficient with all substrates tested. Measurement of Rotenone-sensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase in mitochondrial preparations from skin fibroblasts showed that two of the patients had 14 and 18%, respectively, of control activity. In the third patient, cytochrome oxidase activity was 15% of that in controls. We conclude that respiratory chain defects can be demonstrated in cultured skin fibroblasts with consistency using a number of different techniques.

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Robinson, B. H., Ward, J., Goodyer, P., & Baudet, A. (1986). Respiratory chain defects in the mitochondria of cultured skin fibroblasts from three patients with lacticacidemia. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 77(5), 1422–1427. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI112453

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