A deficiency of both subunits of pyruvate dehydrogenase which is not expressed in fibroblasts

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Abstract

Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) deficiency usually has been detected by decreased activity in cultured skin fibroblasts. We investigated two brothers in whom PDC activity was less than 10% of controls in lymphocytes but normal in skin fibroblasts. They both had abnormal neuromuscular development and lactic acidosis which was aggravated by ingestion of carbohydrate. One brother died at age 3 yr and tissues were obtained at autopsy soon after death. The brain was swollen with diffuse acute hemorrhages but without the lesions characteristic of Leigh’s disease. PDC activity was virtually undetectable in mitochondria or homogenates of liver, skeletal muscle, and heart, but was about 30% of controls in kidney. The activity of the first component E1 was not detectable in mitochondria from liver, whereas the activities of the second and third components were normal; the activities of all components were normal in fibroblasts. Western immunoblot analysis showed absent to trace amounts of both the E1α and E1β subunits in liver, skeletal muscle, and heart, with normal amounts of the second and third components. About one-fourth of control amounts of E1α and E1β were present in kidney and normal levels were present in fibroblasts. PDC activity in lymphocytes from the mother was 35% of controls; she had normal PDC activity in her fibroblasts. PDC activity was normal in lymphocytes from the brothers’ sister, father, and maternal grandparents and great-grandmother. The mode of inheritance was not established. In conclusion, PDC deficiency may not be detected in skin fibroblasts in some cases; the mechanism of variable tissue expression of E1 remains to be delineated. © 1988 International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.

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Kerr, D. S., Berry, S. A., Lusk, M. M., Ho, L., & Patel, M. S. (1988). A deficiency of both subunits of pyruvate dehydrogenase which is not expressed in fibroblasts. Pediatric Research, 24(1), 95–100. https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-198807000-00022

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