Multiple mitochondrial alterations in a case of myopathy

H Fujioka, B Tandler, M Cohen, D Koontz… - Ultrastructural …, 2014 - Taylor & Francis
H Fujioka, B Tandler, M Cohen, D Koontz, CL Hoppel
Ultrastructural Pathology, 2014Taylor & Francis
Mitochondrial alterations are the most common feature of human myopathies. A biopsy of
quadriceps muscle from a 50-year-old woman exhibiting myopathic symptoms was
examined by transmission electron microscopy. Biopsied fibers from quadriceps muscle
displayed numerous subsarcolemmal mitochondria that contained crystalloids. Numbering 1–
6 per organelle, these consisted of rows of punctuate densities measuring∼ 0.34 nm; the
parallel rows of these dots had a periodicity of∼ 0.8 nm. The crystalloids were ensconced …
Abstract
Mitochondrial alterations are the most common feature of human myopathies. A biopsy of quadriceps muscle from a 50-year-old woman exhibiting myopathic symptoms was examined by transmission electron microscopy. Biopsied fibers from quadriceps muscle displayed numerous subsarcolemmal mitochondria that contained crystalloids. Numbering 1–6 per organelle, these consisted of rows of punctuate densities measuring ∼0.34 nm; the parallel rows of these dots had a periodicity of ∼0.8 nm. The crystalloids were ensconced within cristae or in the outer compartment. Some mitochondria without crystalloids had circumferential cristae, leaving a membrane-free center that was filled with a farinaceous material. Other scattered fibrocyte defects included disruption of the contractile apparatus or its sporadic replacement by a finely punctuate material in some myofibers. Intramitochondrial crystalloids, although morphologically striking, do not impair organelle physiology to a significant degree, so the muscle weakness of the patient must originate elsewhere.
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