[HTML][HTML] Mouse studies to shape clinical trials for mitochondrial diseases: high fat diet in Harlequin mice

M Schiff, P Benit, R El-Khoury, D Schlemmer… - PLoS …, 2011 - journals.plos.org
M Schiff, P Benit, R El-Khoury, D Schlemmer, JF Benoist, P Rustin
PLoS One, 2011journals.plos.org
Background Therapeutic options in human mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation
(OXPHOS) diseases have been poorly evaluated mostly because of the scarcity of cohorts
and the inter-individual variability of disease progression. Thus, while a high fat diet (HFD) is
often recommended, data regarding efficacy are limited. Our objectives were 1) to determine
our ability to evaluate therapeutic options in the Harlequin OXPHOS complex I (CI)-deficient
mice, in the context of a mitochondrial disease with human hallmarks and 2) to assess the …
Background
Therapeutic options in human mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) diseases have been poorly evaluated mostly because of the scarcity of cohorts and the inter-individual variability of disease progression. Thus, while a high fat diet (HFD) is often recommended, data regarding efficacy are limited. Our objectives were 1) to determine our ability to evaluate therapeutic options in the Harlequin OXPHOS complex I (CI)-deficient mice, in the context of a mitochondrial disease with human hallmarks and 2) to assess the effects of a HFD.
Methods and Findings
Before launching long and expensive animal studies, we showed that palmitate afforded long-term death-protection in 3 CI-mutant human fibroblasts cell lines. We next demonstrated that using the Harlequin mouse, it was possible to draw solid conclusions on the efficacy of a 5-month-HFD on neurodegenerative symptoms. Moreover, we could identify a group of highly responsive animals, echoing the high variability of the disease progression in Harlequin mice.
Conclusions
These results suggest that a reduced number of patients with identical genetic disease should be sufficient to reach firm conclusions as far as the potential existence of responders and non responders is recognized. They also positively prefigure HFD-trials in OXPHOS-deficient patients.
PLOS