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Metabolomes of mitochondrial diseases and inclusion body myositis patients: treatment targets and biomarkers.

  • Jana Buzkova‎ et al.
  • EMBO molecular medicine‎
  • 2018‎

Mitochondrial disorders (MDs) are inherited multi-organ diseases with variable phenotypes. Inclusion body myositis (IBM), a sporadic inflammatory muscle disease, also shows mitochondrial dysfunction. We investigated whether primary and secondary MDs modify metabolism to reveal pathogenic pathways and biomarkers. We investigated metabolomes of 25 mitochondrial myopathy or ataxias patients, 16 unaffected carriers, six IBM and 15 non-mitochondrial neuromuscular disease (NMD) patients and 30 matched controls. MD and IBM metabolomes clustered separately from controls and NMDs. MDs and IBM showed transsulfuration pathway changes; creatine and niacinamide depletion marked NMDs, IBM and infantile-onset spinocerebellar ataxia (IOSCA). Low blood and muscle arginine was specific for patients with m.3243A>G mutation. A four-metabolite blood multi-biomarker (sorbitol, alanine, myoinositol, cystathionine) distinguished primary MDs from others (76% sensitivity, 95% specificity). Our omics approach identified pathways currently used to treat NMDs and mitochondrial stroke-like episodes and proposes nicotinamide riboside in MDs and IBM, and creatine in IOSCA and IBM as novel treatment targets. The disease-specific metabolic fingerprints are valuable "multi-biomarkers" for diagnosis and promising tools for follow-up of disease progression and treatment effect.


Single cell RNA sequencing sheds light on infiltrating T cells in idiopathic inflammatory myopathies.

  • Momina Yazdani‎ et al.
  • EMBO molecular medicine‎
  • 2023‎

Idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM), also referred to as "myositis," are a group of heterogeneous autoimmune disorders characterised by muscle weakness, atrophy and progressive reduced mobility (Lundberg et al, 2021). IIM represent a significant health burden in adult populations, affecting individuals at a mean age of 50 with an estimated prevalence of 2.9-34 per 100,000 (Dobloug et al, 2015; Svensson et al, 2017). IIM encompass several subtypes including dermatomyositis, immune-mediated necrotising myopathy, inclusion-body myositis, antisynthetase syndrome and polymyositis, which are characterised by specific clinical features, histopathological findings and autoantibody status (Pinal-Fernandez et al, 2020).


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