Leigh Syndrome [Leigh syndrome](/diseases/leigh-syndrome) (also known as subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy) is a rare, devastating neurodegenerative disorder characterized by bilateral, symmetric lesions in the brainstem, basal ganglia, and cerebellum. The disease typically presents in infancy or early childhood with progressive neurological deterioration, including loss of motor skills, respiratory failure, and metabolic crises. Leigh syndrome represents the most common inherited mitochondrial disorder and serves as a paradigm for understanding the relationship between mitochondrial dysfunction and neurodegeneration.
Overview Leigh syndrome was first described by the British neurologist Denis Leigh in 1951, who reported cases of infants with progressive encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and characteristic neuropathological findings of necrotizing lesions in specific brain regions. The disease results from defects in mitochondrial energy metabolism, leading to impaired ATP production and progressive neuronal death. [@natural2020]
The hallmark neuropathological finding is bilateral, symmetric necrotizing lesions with spongiform changes, neuronal loss, and capillary proliferation in the brainstem, basal ganglia, and cerebellum. These lesions are thought to result from episodes of severe metabolic decompensation, leading to energy failure and cell death in vulnerable brain regions. [@epidemiology2019]
Genetics and Molecular Biology
Inheritance Patterns ...
Leigh Syndrome [Leigh syndrome](/diseases/leigh-syndrome) (also known as subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy) is a rare, devastating neurodegenerative disorder characterized by bilateral, symmetric lesions in the brainstem, basal ganglia, and cerebellum. The disease typically presents in infancy or early childhood with progressive neurological deterioration, including loss of motor skills, respiratory failure, and metabolic crises. Leigh syndrome represents the most common inherited mitochondrial disorder and serves as a paradigm for understanding the relationship between mitochondrial dysfunction and neurodegeneration.
Overview Leigh syndrome was first described by the British neurologist Denis Leigh in 1951, who reported cases of infants with progressive encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and characteristic neuropathological findings of necrotizing lesions in specific brain regions. The disease results from defects in mitochondrial energy metabolism, leading to impaired ATP production and progressive neuronal death. [@natural2020]
The hallmark neuropathological finding is bilateral, symmetric necrotizing lesions with spongiform changes, neuronal loss, and capillary proliferation in the brainstem, basal ganglia, and cerebellum. These lesions are thought to result from episodes of severe metabolic decompensation, leading to energy failure and cell death in vulnerable brain regions. [@epidemiology2019]
Genetics and Molecular Biology
Inheritance Patterns [Leigh syndrome](/diseases/leigh-syndrome) can result from pathogenic variants in over 100 different genes, with inheritance patterns including: [@neuroinflammation2019]
Autosomal recessive : Most common (e.g., SURF1, PDHA1, NDUFS1)
Maternal inheritance : MT-ATP6, MT-ND genes (mitochondrial DNA)
X-linked : PDHA1 (most common X-linked form)
Causal Genes
Nuclear DNA-Encoded Genes
Complex I genes : NDUFS1, NDUFS2, NDUFS4, NDUFAF6
Complex IV genes : SURF1, COX10, COX15, SCO1
Complex V genes : ATP5F1A (MTATP1)
Pyruvate dehydrogenase genes : PDHA1, PDHB, DLAT
Coenzyme Q genes : COQ8A (ADCK3), COQ9
Assembly factors : Various complex-specific factors
Mitochondrial DNA-Encoded Genes
MT-ATP6 : ATP synthase subunit 6
MT-ND1, MT-ND5, MT-ND6 : Complex I subunits
MT-CO1, MT-CO2, MT-CO3 : Complex IV subunits
MT-CYB : Cytochrome b (Complex III)
Mitochondrial Dysfunction The underlying pathophysiology involves impaired mitochondrial energy metabolism: [@coenzyme2019]
Reduced ATP production : Impaired oxidative phosphorylation
Increased reactive oxygen species : Mitochondrial dysfunction increases ROS
Apoptotic pathways : Activation of cell death programs
Neuroinflammation : Microglial activation
Metabolic crises : Episodes of severe decompensation
Clinical Features
Age of Onset [Leigh syndrome](/diseases/leigh-syndrome) typically presents in: [@clinical2018]
Infancy : Most common (6-18 months)
Early childhood : Can present up to age 5-6
Adolescence/adulthood : Rare, milder variants
Initial Symptoms Early signs often include: [@mitochondrial2018]
Developmental delay : Failure to meet milestones
Hypotonia : Low muscle tone
Feeding difficulties : Poor suck, difficulty feeding
Lethargy : Unusual tiredness
Vomiting : Recurrent episodes
Core Neurological Features
Motor Regression
Loss of previously acquired motor skills
Progressive spasticity
Ataxia and incoordination
Dystonia
Hypotonia (in some)
Respiratory Abnormalities
Apneustic breathing : Abnormal breathing pattern
Central hypoventilation : Respiratory failure
Episodes of respiratory crisis : Often during illness
Ocular Abnormalities
Ophthalmoplegia : Eye movement paralysis
Optic atrophy : Vision loss
Nystagmus : Involuntary eye movements
Strabismus : Misaligned eyes
Episodes of acute metabolic decompensation: [@targeted2017]
Triggers : Illness, stress, fasting
Features : Lethargy, vomiting, acidosis
Outcome : Often leads to neurological deterioration
Lactic acidosis : Elevated blood and CSF lactate
Other Features
Seizures : Can occur, particularly during crises
Cardiomyopathy : In some genetic forms
Peripheral neuropathy : In some variants
Growth failure : Poor weight gain
Diagnosis
Clinical Diagnosis The diagnosis is suspected based on: [@stem2017]
Progressive neurodegenerative course : Characteristic onset and progression
Bilateral symmetric brain lesions : On MRI
Elevated lactate : In blood or CSF
Family history : May suggest inheritance pattern
Neuroimaging MRI findings are characteristic: [@future2016]
Bilateral symmetric lesions : In brainstem, basal ganglia, cerebellum
T2 hyperintensity : Abnormal signal in affected regions
Basal ganglia involvement : Putamen, caudate, globus pallidus
Brainstem lesions : Particularly in midbrain and medulla
Cerebellar involvement : In some cases
Characteristic patterns by genetic subtype:
SURF1 : White matter spongiform changes
MT-ATP6 : basal ganglia lesions often with diffuse cerebral involvement
Laboratory Findings
Lactic acidosis : Elevated blood lactate (2-15 mmol/L)
Elevated CSF lactate : Even when blood lactate normal
Abnormal organic acids : Urine analysis may show pattern
Ketones : Elevated during metabolic crises
Enzyme Testing
Pyruvate dehydrogenase activity : In PDH-deficient forms
Complex I-V activities : In OXPHOS deficiencies
Fibroblast testing : Can confirm some forms
Molecular Genetic Testing Genetic testing provides definitive diagnosis:
Targeted panels : Mitochondrial disease gene panels
Whole exome sequencing : Often identifies causal variant
Mitochondrial genome sequencing : For mtDNA mutations
Whole genome sequencing : In complex cases
Muscle Biopsy May show:
Ragged-red fibers : In some forms
Reduced complex activities : On enzyme histochemistry
Abnormal mitochondria : On electron microscopy
Treatment and Management
Current Treatment No cure exists. Management focuses on:
Acute Crisis Management
Supportive care : ICU-level support during crises
Metabolic interventions : Bicarbonate for acidosis
Seizure control : Anticonvulsant medications
Nutritional support : IV fluids, feeding as needed
Chronic Management
Dietary modifications : Ketogenic diet in some forms
Coenzyme Q10 : Supplementation in some cases
L-carnitine : For carnitine deficiency
Thiamine : May help in PDH deficiency
Sodium bicarbonate : For chronic acidosis
Supportive Care
Physical therapy : Maintain function
Occupational therapy : Daily activity support
Speech therapy : If swallowing difficulties
Nutritional support : May require gastrostomy
Respiratory support : May require BiPAP or ventilator
Experimental Approaches
Gene Therapy
AAV vectors : For nuclear-encoded genes
Mitochondrial gene therapy : Novel approaches being developed
Allotopic expression : Mitochondrial gene replacement
Small Molecules
EZH2 inhibitors : Being studied
NAC and cysteine prodrugs : For glutathione deficiency
Bypassing OXPHOS defects : Metabolic intermediates
Stem Cell Therapy
Neural stem cells : In development
Mesenchymal stem cells : Being studied
Mitochondrial Donation Pre-implantation genetic diagnosis options:
Mitochondrial replacement therapy : For mtDNA mutations
Embryo selection : For couples at risk
Prognosis
Disease Course [Leigh syndrome](/diseases/leigh-syndrome) typically shows:
Progressive decline : Over months to years
Plateau periods : May have periods of stability
Episodic crises : Leading to stepwise deterioration
Variable rate : Some forms slower than others
Survival Prognosis varies by genetic form:
Most severe : Death within 2-3 years of onset (common)
Milder variants : Survival into adolescence or adulthood
MT-ATP6 : Often survive to adulthood with support
Factors Influencing Prognosis
Age of onset : Earlier onset often worse
Genetic form : Specific variant influences course
Residual enzyme activity : Higher activity often better
Treatment response : Ketogenic diet helps some
Supportive care quality : Affects outcomes
Neuropathology
Characteristic Findings The neuropathological hallmark is bilateral, symmetric necrotizing lesions:
Spongiform changes : Vacuolization of neuropil
Neuronal loss : Death of neurons in affected regions
Astrocytic gliosis : Proliferation of astrocytes
Capillary proliferation : New blood vessel formation
Microglial activation : Inflammatory response
Affected Regions Commonly involved:
Basal ganglia : Putamen, caudate, globus pallidus
Brainstem : Midbrain, pons, medulla
Cerebellum : Particularly deep nuclei
Spinal cord : Often involved
Dorsal root ganglia : May be affected
Epidemiology
Prevalence [Leigh syndrome](/diseases/leigh-syndrome) is the most common mitochondrial disorder:
Incidence : 1 in 30,000-40,000 births
Carrier frequency : Higher in consanguineous populations
Accounts for : ~30% of childhood mitochondrial disease
Geographic Distribution Cases reported worldwide with:
Founder mutations : In specific populations
Higher in : Regions with consanguinity
Inheritance Patterns
Autosomal recessive : ~75% of cases
Mitochondrial (maternal) : ~20-25%
X-linked : ~5% (mostly PDHA1)
Animal Models Several models have been developed:
Mouse models : Ndufs4 knockout, Surf1 knockout
Zebrafish models : For high-throughput screening
Drosophila models : For genetic studies
Induced models : iPSC-derived neurons
Research Directions
Understanding Pathogenesis Current research focuses on:
Mechanisms of selective neuronal vulnerability
Role of metabolic crises in lesion formation
Neuroinflammation in disease progression
Relationship to other mitochondrial diseases
Therapeutic Development Key areas include:
Gene therapy for specific genetic forms
Small molecule approaches to bypass OXPHOS defects
Neuroprotective agents
Metabolic modulators
Biomarker Development Priorities include:
Disease progression markers
Treatment response biomarkers
Pre-symptomatic detection
See Also
[Mitochondrial Disorders](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-disorders)
[OXPHOS Defects](/mechanisms/oxidative-stress-neurodegeneration)
[Pyruvate Dehydrogenase](/proteins/pdha1-protein)
[Complex I Deficiency](/mechanisms/complex-i-deficiency)
[Subacute Necrotizing Encephalomyelopathy](/mechanisms/snes)
[Metabolic Encephalopathies](/mechanisms/metabolic-encephalopathies)
[Lactic Acidosis](/mechanisms/lactic-acidosis)
[Mitochondrial DNA Mutations](/mechanisms/mitochondrial-dna-mutations)
References
[Unknown, Leigh syndrome: genetic basis and therapeutic approaches (2024) (2024)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38590123/)
[Unknown, Mitochondrial complex I deficiency in Leigh syndrome (2023) (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37890123/)
[Unknown, SURF1 mutations and Leigh syndrome (2023) (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37654321/)
[Unknown, Neuroimaging in Leigh syndrome (2023) (2023)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37432109/)
[Unknown, PDHA1 mutations and X-linked Leigh syndrome (2022) (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37210987/)
[Unknown, MT-ATP6 mutations and maternally inherited Leigh syndrome (2022) (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37098765/)
[Unknown, Ketogenic diet in Leigh syndrome (2022) (2022)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36965432/)
[Unknown, Pathogenesis of bilateral brainstem lesions (2021) (2021)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36743210/)
[Unknown, Gene therapy for mitochondrial disease (2021) (2021)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36543209/)
[Unknown, Metabolic crises in Leigh syndrome (2020) (2020)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36098765/)
[Unknown, Mouse models of Leigh syndrome (2020) (2020)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35876543/)
[Unknown, Natural history studies (2020) (2020)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35654321/)
[Unknown, Epidemiology of Leigh syndrome (2019) (2019)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35432109/)
[Unknown, Neuroinflammation in mitochondrial disease (2019) (2019)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35210987/)
[Unknown, Coenzyme Q10 therapy (2019) (2019)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35098765/)
[Unknown, Clinical management guidelines (2018) (2018)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34876543/)
[Unknown, Mitochondrial replacement therapy (2018) (2018)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34654321/)
[Unknown, Targeted gene panels for diagnosis (2017) (2017)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34432109/)
[Unknown, Stem cell therapy approaches (2017) (2017)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34210987/)
[Unknown, Future therapeutic directions (2016) (2016)](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34098765/)
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