Severe mitochondrial encephalomyopathy caused by de novo variants in OPA1 gene

Front Genet. 2024 Aug 20:15:1437959. doi: 10.3389/fgene.2024.1437959. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Background: Mitochondria adjust their shape in response to the different energetic and metabolic requirements of the cell, through extremely dynamic fusion and fission events. Several highly conserved dynamin-like GTPases are involved in these processes and, among those, the OPA1 protein is a key player in the fusion of inner mitochondrial membranes. Hundreds of monoallelic or biallelic pathogenic gene variants have been described in OPA1, all associated with a plethora of clinical phenotypes without a straightforward genotype-phenotype correlation.

Methods: Here we report two patients harboring novel de novo variants in OPA1. DNA of two patients was analyzed using NGS technology and the pathogenicity has been evaluated through biochemical and morphological studies in patient's derived fibroblasts and in yeast model.

Results: The two patients here reported manifest with neurological signs resembling Leigh syndrome, thus further expanding the clinical spectrum associated with variants in OPA1. In cultured skin fibroblasts we observed a reduced amount of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and altered mitochondrial network characterized by more fragmented mitochondria. Modeling in yeast allowed to define the deleterious mechanism and the pathogenicity of the identified gene mutations.

Conclusion: We have described two novel-single OPA1 mutations in two patients characterized by early-onset neurological signs, never documented, thus expanding the clinical spectrum of this complex syndrome. Moreover, both yeast model and patients derived fibroblasts showed mitochondrial defects, including decreased mtDNA maintenance, correlating with patients' clinical phenotypes.

Keywords: OPA1; encephalomyopathy; mitochondrial diseases; mitochondrial dynamics; optic atrophy.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This research was supported by funding obtained under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), Mission 4 Component 2 Investment 1.3—Call for tender No. 341 of 15/03/2022 of the Italian Ministry of University and Research funded by the European Union-NextGenerationEU, Project code PE0000006, Concession Decree No. 1553 of 11/10/2022 adopted by the Italian Ministry of University and Research, CUP D93C22000930002, “A multiscale integrated approach to the study of the nervous system in health and disease” (MNESYS); by Ricerca Corrente RC2023 to FMS. EB, DD, DM, BS, and CD-V are members of the ERN MetabERN network. This work was supported also by the Italian Ministry of Health with “Current Research funds”.