Nineteen patients were found to harbor the mitochondrial DNA A3243G mutation associated with MELAS syndrome (Mitochondrial myopathy, Encephalopathy, Lactic Acidosis and Stroke-like episodes). Eight of them had presented with stroke-like episodes and therefore had a clinical diagnosis of MELAS syndrome. The other 11 patients had no strokes and presented with generally less severe multisystemic disease. In the two groups, we compared muscle morphology, biochemical activities of muscle respiratory chain, and genetic characteristics: proportion and tissue distribution of the mutation, sequence of the 22 transfer RNA genes of the mitochondrial DNA. The proportion of mutant mtDNA in muscle was always greater than in blood. The number of patients in the two groups was too low to reach significant values. However, the patients with a MELAS syndrome presented with more severe respiratory chain abnormalities and with a proportion of the A3243G mutation that was both higher and more uniformly distributed among tissues. For symptoms others than stroke-like episodes, we did not observe any correlation with the level of mutant mtDNA in muscle. The analysis of the 22 tRNA sequences did not show differences between the two groups, and no co-inherited modifying tRNA genes could explain the variability of severity in our patients.