Mitochondrial studies in Kearns‐Sayre syndrome

Abstract
Intact mitochondria were isolated from skeletal muscle of two patients with Kearns-Sayre syndrome (retinitis pigmentosa, heart block, chronic external ophthalmoplegia), and mitochondrial protein translation was measured. Mitochondrial protein synthesis was up to 10 times greater than in control subjects and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed absence of a translation product with the mobility of a 5 KDa protein. State 3 respiration rates were normal with site 1 and site 2 substrates, suggesting that the absent protein was not a functional subunit of a respiratory chain complex.