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Murine cytomegalovirus infection exacerbates complex IV deficiency in a model of mitochondrial disease.

Nicola FerreiraChristopher E AndoniouKara L PerksJudith A ErmerDanielle L RudlerGiulia RossettiAmbika PeriyakaruppiahJamie K Y WongOliver RackhamPeter G NoakesMariapia A Degli-EspostiAleksandra Filipovska
Published in: PLoS genetics (2020)
The influence of environmental insults on the onset and progression of mitochondrial diseases is unknown. To evaluate the effects of infection on mitochondrial disease we used a mouse model of Leigh Syndrome, where a missense mutation in the Taco1 gene results in the loss of the translation activator of cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (TACO1) protein. The mutation leads to an isolated complex IV deficiency that mimics the disease pathology observed in human patients with TACO1 mutations. We infected Taco1 mutant and wild-type mice with a murine cytomegalovirus and show that a common viral infection exacerbates the complex IV deficiency in a tissue-specific manner. We identified changes in neuromuscular morphology and tissue-specific regulation of the mammalian target of rapamycin pathway in response to viral infection. Taken together, we report for the first time that a common stress condition, such as viral infection, can exacerbate mitochondrial dysfunction in a genetic model of mitochondrial disease.
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