Mitochondrial Diseases - Tiny Engines, Big Trouble
- Cellular powerhouses; ATP via oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS).
- Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA):
- Circular; encodes 13 OXPHOS proteins, tRNAs, rRNAs.
- High mutation rate (no histones, poor repair).
- 📌 Exclusively maternally inherited.
- Core Principles:
- Heteroplasmy: Mix of normal/mutant mtDNA per cell.
- Threshold Effect: Disease if mutant mtDNA % > critical level.
- Replicative Segregation: Random mtDNA sorting at cell division.
- Affects high-energy organs: brain, muscle (ragged red fibers), heart, eye.
- Common Syndromes: MELAS, MERRF, LHON, KSS.
⭐ Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is exclusively maternally inherited, a key concept for pedigree analysis.

Mitochondrial Diseases - Energy Drain Drama
- Genetic defects (mtDNA/nDNA) impairing oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) $\rightarrow \downarrow ATP$ & $\uparrow$ ROS.
- Clinical Impact (High-Energy Demand Tissues):
- Brain: Encephalopathy, seizures, stroke-like episodes (MELAS).
- Muscle: Myopathy, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia (KSS); Ragged Red Fibers (RRF) on biopsy.
- Heart: Cardiomyopathy.
- Eye: Optic neuropathy (LHON).
- Diagnosis:
- Clinical suspicion.
- Elevated lactate (often > 2.2 mmol/L).
- Muscle biopsy: RRFs (Gomori trichrome stain).
- Genetic testing.
- Inheritance: Maternal (mtDNA defects); Mendelian (nDNA defects).

⭐ Tissues with high energy demand like the brain (encephalopathy), muscles (myopathy), and heart (cardiomyopathy) are most vulnerable in mitochondrial diseases.
Mitochondrial Diseases - The Usual Suspects
Mitochondrial diseases are maternally inherited disorders affecting energy-intensive organs. Key syndromes include:
| Syndrome | mtDNA Basis | Key Features |
|---|---|---|
| MELAS | A3243G ($tRNA^{Leu}$) | 📌 Myopathy, Encephalopathy, Lactic Acidosis, Stroke-like episodes; seizures, RRF. |
| MERRF | A8344G ($tRNA^{Lys}$) | Myoclonic Epilepsy, Ragged Red Fibers (RRF); ataxia. |
| LHON | G11778A (ND4), others | Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy; subacute bilateral central vision loss. |
| KSS | Large deletions | Kearns-Sayre: Onset <20 yrs, ophthalmoplegia, pigmentary retinopathy; + heart block, ↑CSF protein (>100 mg/dL). RRF. |
| Leigh Syn. | MT-ATP6 (mtDNA), nDNA genes | Subacute Necrotizing Encephalomyelopathy; infantile neurodegeneration, basal ganglia lesions. |
⭐ 'Ragged Red Fibers' (RRF) on muscle biopsy (Gomori trichrome stain) are characteristic of mitochondrial myopathies like MERRF, KSS, and sometimes MELAS.
Mitochondrial Diseases - Clues & Care Plans
- Clinical Clues (Suspect if):
- Multi-system involvement (neuro, muscle, cardiac, ophthalmic)
- ↑ Lactate, ↑ Pyruvate; ↑ Lactate/Pyruvate ratio
- Family history (maternal inheritance for mtDNA)
- Diagnostic Approach:
- Metabolic screen: Blood (lactate, pyruvate, AAs), Urine (organic acids)
- Muscle Biopsy: Ragged Red Fibers (RRF), COX-negative fibers
- Genetic Testing: mtDNA (common deletions, point mutations), nDNA (e.g., POLG)
- Management Strategies:
- Supportive Care: Symptom-specific (e.g., anti-epileptics, cardiac support)
- Cofactor "Cocktail": CoQ10, L-carnitine, riboflavin, thiamine
- Avoid Mitochondrial Toxins: Valproate, statins, aminoglycosides, metformin, linezolid ⚠️
- Exercise: Aerobic, endurance training
- Genetic Counseling
⭐ A diagnostic triad often includes clinical suspicion, biochemical markers (elevated lactate/pyruvate ratio), and confirmatory genetic testing or muscle biopsy findings.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Mitochondrial diseases exhibit maternal inheritance due to mtDNA mutations.
- Primarily affect high-energy organs: brain, muscle, heart, and eyes.
- Heteroplasmy (mixed mtDNA) and threshold effect cause variable expressivity.
- Common examples: MELAS, MERRF, LHON, and Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS).
- "Ragged red fibers" on muscle biopsy (Gomori trichrome) are characteristic.
- Elevated lactate (lactic acidosis) is a common metabolic finding.
- Often present with multi-systemic involvement and progressive course.
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