Ketogenic Diet Treatment of Defects in the Mitochondrial Malate Aspartate Shuttle and Pyruvate Carrier

  • Bigna K Bölsterli
  • Eugen Boltshauser
  • Luigi Palmieri
  • Johannes Spenger
  • Michaela Brunner-Krainz
  • Felix Distelmaier
  • Peter Freisinger
  • Tobias Geis
  • Andrea L Gropman
  • Johannes Häberle
  • Julia Hentschel
  • Bruno Jeandidier
  • Daniela Karall
  • Boris Keren
  • Annick Klabunde-Cherwon
  • Vassiliki Konstantopoulou
  • Raimund Kottke
  • Francesco M Lasorsa
  • Christine Makowski
  • Cyril Mignot
  • Ruth O'Gorman Tuura
  • Vito Porcelli
  • René Santer
  • Kuntal Sen
  • Katja Steinbrücker
  • Steffen Syrbe
  • Matias Wagner
  • Andreas Ziegler
  • Thomas Zöggeler
  • Johannes A Mayr
  • Holger Prokisch
  • Saskia B Wortmann

Related Research units

Abstract

The mitochondrial malate aspartate shuttle system (MAS) maintains the cytosolic NAD+/NADH redox balance, thereby sustaining cytosolic redox-dependent pathways, such as glycolysis and serine biosynthesis. Human disease has been associated with defects in four MAS-proteins (encoded by MDH1, MDH2, GOT2, SLC25A12) sharing a neurological/epileptic phenotype, as well as citrin deficiency (SLC25A13) with a complex hepatopathic-neuropsychiatric phenotype. Ketogenic diets (KD) are high-fat/low-carbohydrate diets, which decrease glycolysis thus bypassing the mentioned defects. The same holds for mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) 1 deficiency, which also presents neurological deficits. We here describe 40 (18 previously unreported) subjects with MAS-/MPC1-defects (32 neurological phenotypes, eight citrin deficiency), describe and discuss their phenotypes and genotypes (presenting 12 novel variants), and the efficacy of KD. Of 13 MAS/MPC1-individuals with a neurological phenotype treated with KD, 11 experienced benefits-mainly a striking effect against seizures. Two individuals with citrin deficiency deceased before the correct diagnosis was established, presumably due to high-carbohydrate treatment. Six citrin-deficient individuals received a carbohydrate-restricted/fat-enriched diet and showed normalisation of laboratory values/hepatopathy as well as age-adequate thriving. We conclude that patients with MAS-/MPC1-defects are amenable to dietary intervention and that early (genetic) diagnosis is key for initiation of proper treatment and can even be lifesaving.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
Article number3605
ISSN2072-6643
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31.08.2022
PubMed 36079864