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Exclusion of sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase from mitochondria causes Leigh-like disease in mice by impairing sulfide metabolism
Eiki Kanemaru, … , Takaaki Akaike, Fumito Ichinose
Eiki Kanemaru, … , Takaaki Akaike, Fumito Ichinose
Published June 13, 2024
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(15):e170994. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI170994.
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Research Article Metabolism

Exclusion of sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase from mitochondria causes Leigh-like disease in mice by impairing sulfide metabolism

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Abstract

Leigh syndrome is the most common inherited mitochondrial disease in children and is often fatal within the first few years of life. In 2020, mutations in the gene encoding sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase (SQOR), a mitochondrial protein, were identified as a cause of Leigh syndrome. Here, we report that mice with a mutation in the gene encoding SQOR (SqorΔN/ΔN mice), which prevented SQOR from entering mitochondria, had clinical and pathological manifestations of Leigh syndrome. SqorΔN/ΔN mice had increased blood lactate levels that were associated with markedly decreased complex IV activity and increased hydrogen sulfide (H2S) levels. Because H2S is produced by both gut microbiota and host tissue, we tested whether metronidazole (a broad-spectrum antibiotic) or a sulfur-restricted diet rescues SqorΔN/ΔN mice from developing Leigh syndrome. Daily treatment with metronidazole alleviated increased H2S levels, normalized complex IV activity and blood lactate levels, and prolonged the survival of SqorΔN/ΔN mice. Similarly, a sulfur-restricted diet normalized blood lactate levels and inhibited the development of Leigh syndrome. Taken together, these observations suggest that mitochondrial SQOR is essential to prevent systemic accumulation of H2S. Metronidazole administration and a sulfur-restricted diet may be therapeutic approaches to treatment of patients with Leigh syndrome caused by mutations in SQOR.

Authors

Eiki Kanemaru, Kakeru Shimoda, Eizo Marutani, Masanobu Morita, Maria Miranda, Yusuke Miyazaki, Claire Sinow, Rohit Sharma, Fangcong Dong, Donald B. Bloch, Takaaki Akaike, Fumito Ichinose

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Figure 3

SqorΔN/ΔN mice had lesions in basal ganglia, midbrain, and brain stem.

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SqorΔN/ΔN mice had lesions in basal ganglia, midbrain, and brain stem.
T...
T2-weighted brain MRI was performed on three 8-week-old SqorΔN/ΔN mice: SqorΔN/ΔN mouse no. 1 (A), SqorΔN/ΔN mouse no. 2 (B), and SqorΔN/ΔN mouse no. 3 (C). Brain lesions in SqorΔN/ΔN mice are indicated by yellow arrows. Brain MRI scans of a control mouse, at the same anatomical levels as those of SqorΔN/ΔN mice, are shown as reference in the bottom panels of A, B, and C.

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