ABSTRACT Mitochondria have long been known to be involved in the regulation of innate immune response. We questioned whether cultured skin fibroblasts of patients suffering from mitochondrial diseases are valuable biological resources for the study of interferon signaling. Expression of interferon‐stimulated genes was measured in control cells supplemented with interferon and in cultured fibroblasts of patients carrying pathogenic variants in mitochondrial disease‐causing genes. Control fibroblasts showed a strong expression of interferon‐stimulated genes in response to interferon, but only 43% of patients’ fibroblasts displayed increased interferon stimulated genes scores. Cytosolic mitochondrial DNA and RNA were quantified by immunofluorescence and confocal microscopy. No correlation between elevated interferon response and cytosolic mitochondrial DNA or RNA release could be established. We found that cultured skin fibroblasts represent a valuable biological resource for the investigation of interferon signaling, but that abnormal interferon signaling is not always observed in patients with mitochondrial diseases. At variance to gene silencing in control fibroblasts, the lack of correlation between elevated interferon response and cytosolic mitochondrial DNA or RNA leakage in patients’ fibroblasts questions the relevance of cellular models as illustrators of pathological situations in humans.
Marchais et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: