RESUMEN
Among the many metabolic encephalomyelopathies caused by deficiencies in the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHC), nearly all involve its E1 subunit. We describe two new familial cases of PDHC deficiency with encephalomyelopathy, chronic lactic acidemia, and a normal E1 subunit of PDHC but deficiency in another component. Activity of PDHC was measured in cultured skin fibroblasts and skeletal muscle, and immunoblot studies were performed on mitochondrial extracts from skin fibroblasts. Spectra of muscle tissue, obtained in vivo with phosphorus 31 nuclear magnetic resonance, were recorded both at rest and with exercise. The PDHC activity was markedly reduced to 10% to 20% of normal values in both cultured skin fibroblasts and skeletal muscle. Immunoblotting of skin fibroblast mitochondrial extracts showed a specific deficiency in the protein X component of PDHC but normal E1, E2, and E3 components. Spectra obtained with 31P nuclear magnetic resonance showed alterations compatible with those found in mitochondrial myopathies. This is the second description of an encephalomyelopathy associated with a specific absence of the lipoyl-containing protein X component, which has a structural role in the formation of a functional PDHC.