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Publication — IRIC

Inactivation of Pif1 helicase causes a mitochondrial myopathy in mice.

Mutations in genes coding for mitochondrial helicases such as TWINKLE and DNA2 are involved in mitochondrial myopathies with mtDNA instability in both human and mouse. We show that inactivation of Pif1, a third member of the mitochondrial helicase family, causes a similar phenotype in mouse. pif1-/- animals develop a mitochondrial myopathy with respiratory chain deficiency. Pif1 inactivation is responsible for a deficiency to repair oxidative stress-induced mtDNA damage in mouse embryonic fibroblasts that is improved by complementation with mitochondrial isoform mPif1(67). These results open new perspectives for the exploration of patients with mtDNA instability disorders.

Publication date
February 23, 2016
Principal Investigators
Bannwarth S, Berg-Alonso L, Augé G, Fragaki K, Kolesar JE, Lespinasse F, Lacas-Gervais S, Burel-Vandenbos F, Villa E, Belmonte F, Michiels JF, Ricci JE, Gherardi R, Harrington L, Kaufman BA, Paquis-Flucklinger V
PubMed reference
Mitochondrion 2016
PubMed ID
26923168
Affiliation
IRCAN, CNRS UMR 7284/INSERM U1081/UNS, Faculté de Médecine, Nice, France; Service de Génétique Médicale, Hôpital Archet 2, CHU de Nice, Nice, France.