Leigh syndrome is a neuropathological disorder with typical morphological changes in brain, appearing regardless of diverse molecular background. One of the most common enzymatic defects in Leigh patients is cytochrome c oxidase deficiency associated with recessive mutations in the SURF1 gene. To assess the SURF1 mutation profile among Polish patients we studied 41 affected children from 34 unrelated families by PCR-SSCP and sequencing. Four novel mutations, c.39delG, c.752-1G>C, c.800_801insT, c.821A>G, and five described pathogenic changes, c.311_312insAT312_321del10, c.688C>T, c.704T>C, c.756_757delCA, c.845_846delCT, were identified in 85.3% of analysed probands. One mutation, c.845_846delCT, was identified in 77.6% of SURF1 alleles. Up to now, it has been reported only in 9% of alleles in other parts of the world. The deletion was used as LS(SURF1-) marker in population studies. Eight heterozygous carriers of the mutation were found in a cohort of 2890 samples. The estimated c.845_846delCT allele frequency is 1:357 (0.28+/-0.2%), and the lowest predicted LS(SURF1-) frequency in Poland 1:126,736.births. Relatively high frequency of LS(SURF1-) in Poland with remarkable c.845_846delCT mutation dominance allows one to start the differential diagnosis of LS in each patient of Polish (and probably Slavonic) origin from the direct search for c.845_846delCT SURF1 mutation.