Novel biallelic mutations in TMEM126B cause splicing defects and lead to
Leigh syndrome with severe complex I deficiency
Abstract
Leigh syndrome (LS) is one of the most common mitochondrial disease
subtypes, caused by mutations in either the nuclear or mitochondrial
genomes. TMEM126B was identified as a mitochondrial complex I assembly
factor. Here, we identified a novel intronic mutation
(c.82-2A>G) and a novel exonic insertion mutation
(c.290dupT) in TMEM126B from a Chinese patient with clinical
manifestations of LS. In silico predictions, minigene splicing
assays and patients’ RNA analyses determined that the
c.82-2A>G mutation resulted in complete exon 2 skipping,
and the c.290dupT mutation provoked partial and complete exon 3
skipping, leading to translational frameshifts and premature
termination. Functional analysis revealed the impaired mitochondrial
function in patient-derived lymphocytes due to the complex I content and
assembly defect. Although TMEM126B mutations have been related to
multi-symptoms (exercise intolerance, severe muscle weakness,
hyperlactic acidemia, pure myopathy, chronic renal failure and
cardiomyopathy), we found the patient carrying these two mutations
developed an middle-onset LS. Altogether, this is the first report that
the patient carrying TMEM126B mutations was diagnosed with LS.
Our data uncover the functional effect and the molecular mechanism of
the pathogenic variants c.82-2A>G and c.290dupT, which
expand gene mutation spectrum of LS and clinical spectrum caused by
TMEM126B mutations.