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Clinical study of ferredoxin-reductase-related mitochondriopathy: Genotype-phenotype correlation and proposal of ancestry-based carrier screening in the Mexican population.
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gimo.2023.100841Abstract
PURPOSE: Ferredoxin reductase (FDXR) is a flavoprotein that functions in both iron sulfur cluster biogenesis and steroid biosynthesis pathways in the mitochondria. Not surprisingly, loss of FDXR function causes severe mitochondrial diseases in humans. Although several FDXR-related mitochondriopathy (FRM) cohorts have been reported in the literature, further characterization of the natural history of FRM is warranted. METHODS: To better understand the spectrum of FRM, a natural history study of FRM was performed. New cases were added to previously reported FRM cases for analysis (n = 62 cases). RESULTS: Optic atrophy, movement disorder, and developmental delay were frequent findings. Mortality is high, with 18% of patients, often infants, passing from complications. Notably, 25% of cases were homozygous or compound heterozygous for the previously reported p.Arg386Trp hotspot variant. Of the obtained ancestry, all but 1 individual heterozygous for the p.Arg386Trp variant was Hispanic, with many reporting Mexican heritage. Utilizing recent large-scale genome sequencing surveys, the carrier frequency of the p.Arg386Trp variant was estimated as 1 of 185 in the Mexican population. CONCLUSION: Given the high mortality of FRM and carrier frequency of the common variant, consideration of a new approach for population carrier screening and development of therapeutics for affected individuals is needed.
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