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Neurology. 1986 Jul.
Systemic carnitine deficiency due to lack of electron transfer flavoprotein:ubiquinone oxidoreductase.
Di Donato S, Frerman FE, Rimoldi M, Rinaldo P, Taroni F, Wiesmann UN.

A child with myopathy and systemic carnitine deficiency died at age 8 years in an acute metabolic attack. He had glutaric aciduria type II, and his cultured fibroblasts contained normal activity of four different acyl CoA dehydrogenases, but there was deficiency of electron transfer flavoprotein:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO). This enzyme is thought to reduce coenzyme Q in the respiratory chain, funneling reducing equivalents from seven flavoproteins in the beta-oxidation of acyl CoAs. There was massive urinary excretion of the short-chain acylcarnitines that accumulated in mitochondria as a result of the ETF-QO defect. Carnitine therefore acts as a buffer for excessive accumulation of intramitochondrial acyl CoAs, and defective beta-oxidation can cause carnitine insufficiency.

Categories: 1986, Energy metabolism, Mitochondria, Electron transport chain, Carnitine, Carnitine deficiency, Acylcarnitines, CoQ10, Glutaric aciduria, Myopathy, Inborn errors of metabolism, Organic acidurias, Organic acid metabolism


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