Mitochondrial disorders
Gene: NDUFA5EnsemblGeneIds (GRCh38): ENSG00000128609
EnsemblGeneIds (GRCh37): ENSG00000128609
OMIM: 601677, Gene2Phenotype
NDUFA5 is in 4 panels
2 reviews
Achchuthan Shanmugasundram (Genomics England Curator)
Comment on list classification: There are five patients from four unrelated families reported with complex I deficiency and biallelic NDUFA5 variants. There is also functional evidence available from in vitro studies and animal models. Hence, this gene can be promoted to green rating in the next GMS update.Created: 14 Apr 2026, 2:35 p.m. | Last Modified: 14 Apr 2026, 2:35 p.m.
Panel Version: 9.54
PMID:41859003 (2025) reported a 4-month old male patient presenting with respiratory infection, dyspnea, altered mental status, seizures, and shock. In addition, the patient also displayed delayed development after birth. Compound heterozygous variants in NDUFA5 gene were identified via whole genome sequencing and confirmed with Sanger sequencing in this patient. There is also in vitro functional evidence available for these variants, which demonstrated their pathogenicity.
PMID:41916321 (2026) reported four individuals from three unrelated families with biallelic NDUFA5 variants (compound heterozygous in two families and homozygous in one family). They all presented with a variable multisystem disease in the setting of a mitochondrial complex I deficiency and encompassing severe congenital heart defects, hematological abnormalities, and neurological involvement consistent with Leigh syndrome. It was also biochemically proven via an array of respiratory chain enzymology, blue native PAGE, and mass-spectrometry-based proteomics in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, lymphoblastoid cell lines, fibroblasts, and skeletal muscle. Zebrafish ndufa5 F0 mutants also exhibited defects of morphological development, locomotor deficits, and abnormal brain activity.
This gene has not yet been associated with relevant phenotypes either in OMIM (last accessed 14 April 2026) or in Gene2Phenotype.Created: 14 Apr 2026, 2:33 p.m. | Last Modified: 14 Apr 2026, 2:33 p.m.
Panel Version: 9.51
Mode of inheritance
BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal
Phenotypes
mitochondrial complex I deficiency, MONDO:0100133
Publications
Shamima Rahman (UCL Institute of Child Health)
no mutation reports in literature; good candidate gene for complex I deficiency (encodes a subunit of the enzyme)
Created: 4 Feb 2016, 7:02 p.m.
Details
- Mode of Inheritance
- BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal
- Sources
-
- Expert Review Amber
- Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen
- Expert list
- Phenotypes
-
- mitochondrial complex I deficiency, MONDO:0100133
- Tags
- OMIM
- 601677
- Clinvar variants
- Variants in NDUFA5
- Penetrance
- Complete
- Publications
- Panels with this gene
History Filter Activity
Entity classified by Genomics England curator
Achchuthan Shanmugasundram (Genomics England Curator)Gene: ndufa5 has been classified as Amber List (Moderate Evidence).
Set Phenotypes
Achchuthan Shanmugasundram (Genomics England Curator)Phenotypes for gene: NDUFA5 were changed from Isolated complex I deficiency; No OMIM phenotype to mitochondrial complex I deficiency, MONDO:0100133
Set publications
Achchuthan Shanmugasundram (Genomics England Curator)Publications for gene: NDUFA5 were set to 24154540
Set mode of inheritance
Achchuthan Shanmugasundram (Genomics England Curator)Mode of inheritance for gene: NDUFA5 was changed from to BIALLELIC, autosomal or pseudoautosomal
Added Tag
Achchuthan Shanmugasundram (Genomics England Curator)Tag Q2_26_promote_green tag was added to gene: NDUFA5.
Set publications
Sarah Leigh (Genomics England Curator)Publications for gene: NDUFA5 were set to
Added New Source
Ellen McDonagh (Genomics England Curator)NDUFA5 was added to All recognised syndromes and those with suggestive featurespanel. Sources: Expert list,Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen
Added New Source
Ellen McDonagh (Genomics England Curator)NDUFA5 was added to All recognised syndromes and those with suggestive featurespanel. Sources: Expert list,Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen