Mitochondria and the heart
- 1 May 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Cardiology
- Vol. 16 (3) , 201-210
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001573-200105000-00008
Abstract
Since the identification of the first pathogenic mutations of mitochondrial DNA in 1988, a plethora of information about human mitochondrial diseases has been brought to light. Not surprisingly, many of these disorders affect the myocardium, because this tissue relies heavily upon oxidative metabolism. This review focuses on disorders of the respiratory chain, the only area of mammalian cellular metabolism under the control of two genomes, nuclear and mitochondrial. Consequently, defects of aerobic synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) can be due to mutations of either genome. We describe genetic mitochondrial cardiomyopathies and briefly review mouse models and the mitochondrial theory of presbycardia.Keywords
This publication has 85 references indexed in Scilit:
- Maintenance of Human Rearranged Mitochondrial DNAs in Long-Term Cultured Transmitochondrial Cell LinesMolecular Biology of the Cell, 2000
- Mutations in mtDNA: Are We Scraping the Bottom of the Barrel?Brain Pathology, 2000
- Genetics of neonatal cardiomyopathyCurrent Opinion in Cardiology, 1999
- Association of myopathy with large‐scale mitochondrial dna duplications and deletions: Which is pathogenic?Annals of Neurology, 1997
- Cardiac Involvement in Mitochondrial DiseasesCirculation, 1995
- Kearns‐Sayre syndrome and dilated cardiomyopathyNeurology, 1990
- Cardiomyopathy in the Kearns-Sayre syndrome.Heart, 1988
- Fatal mitochondrial cardiomyopathy in Kearns-Sayre SyndromeVirchows Archiv, 1986
- Near-fatal Kearns-Sayre SyndromeClinical Pediatrics, 1983
- Sequence and organization of the human mitochondrial genomeNature, 1981