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Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication

Although the functional consequences of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genetic backgrounds (haplotypes, haplogroups) have been demonstrated by both disease association studies and cell culture experiments, it is not clear which of the mutations within the haplogroup carry functional implications and whic...

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Autores principales: Suissa, Sarit, Wang, Zhibo, Poole, Jason, Wittkopp, Sharine, Feder, Jeanette, Shutt, Timothy E., Wallace, Douglas C., Shadel, Gerald S., Mishmar, Dan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2673036/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19424428
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000474
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author Suissa, Sarit
Wang, Zhibo
Poole, Jason
Wittkopp, Sharine
Feder, Jeanette
Shutt, Timothy E.
Wallace, Douglas C.
Shadel, Gerald S.
Mishmar, Dan
author_facet Suissa, Sarit
Wang, Zhibo
Poole, Jason
Wittkopp, Sharine
Feder, Jeanette
Shutt, Timothy E.
Wallace, Douglas C.
Shadel, Gerald S.
Mishmar, Dan
author_sort Suissa, Sarit
collection PubMed
description Although the functional consequences of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genetic backgrounds (haplotypes, haplogroups) have been demonstrated by both disease association studies and cell culture experiments, it is not clear which of the mutations within the haplogroup carry functional implications and which are “evolutionary silent hitchhikers”. We set forth to study the functionality of haplogroup-defining mutations within the mtDNA transcription/replication regulatory region by in vitro transcription, hypothesizing that haplogroup-defining mutations occurring within regulatory motifs of mtDNA could affect these processes. We thus screened >2500 complete human mtDNAs representing all major populations worldwide for natural variation in experimentally established protein binding sites and regulatory regions comprising a total of 241 bp in each mtDNA. Our screen revealed 77/241 sites showing point mutations that could be divided into non-fixed (57/77, 74%) and haplogroup/sub-haplogroup-defining changes (i.e., population fixed changes, 20/77, 26%). The variant defining Caucasian haplogroup J (C295T) increased the binding of TFAM (Electro Mobility Shift Assay) and the capacity of in vitro L-strand transcription, especially of a shorter transcript that maps immediately upstream of conserved sequence block 1 (CSB1), a region associated with RNA priming of mtDNA replication. Consistent with this finding, cybrids (i.e., cells sharing the same nuclear genetic background but differing in their mtDNA backgrounds) harboring haplogroup J mtDNA had a >2 fold increase in mtDNA copy number, as compared to cybrids containing haplogroup H, with no apparent differences in steady state levels of mtDNA-encoded transcripts. Hence, a haplogroup J regulatory region mutation affects mtDNA replication or stability, which may partially account for the phenotypic impact of this haplogroup. Our analysis thus demonstrates, for the first time, the functional impact of particular mtDNA haplogroup-defining control region mutations, paving the path towards assessing the functionality of both fixed and un-fixed genetic variants in the mitochondrial genome.
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spelling pubmed-26730362009-05-08 Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication Suissa, Sarit Wang, Zhibo Poole, Jason Wittkopp, Sharine Feder, Jeanette Shutt, Timothy E. Wallace, Douglas C. Shadel, Gerald S. Mishmar, Dan PLoS Genet Research Article Although the functional consequences of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genetic backgrounds (haplotypes, haplogroups) have been demonstrated by both disease association studies and cell culture experiments, it is not clear which of the mutations within the haplogroup carry functional implications and which are “evolutionary silent hitchhikers”. We set forth to study the functionality of haplogroup-defining mutations within the mtDNA transcription/replication regulatory region by in vitro transcription, hypothesizing that haplogroup-defining mutations occurring within regulatory motifs of mtDNA could affect these processes. We thus screened >2500 complete human mtDNAs representing all major populations worldwide for natural variation in experimentally established protein binding sites and regulatory regions comprising a total of 241 bp in each mtDNA. Our screen revealed 77/241 sites showing point mutations that could be divided into non-fixed (57/77, 74%) and haplogroup/sub-haplogroup-defining changes (i.e., population fixed changes, 20/77, 26%). The variant defining Caucasian haplogroup J (C295T) increased the binding of TFAM (Electro Mobility Shift Assay) and the capacity of in vitro L-strand transcription, especially of a shorter transcript that maps immediately upstream of conserved sequence block 1 (CSB1), a region associated with RNA priming of mtDNA replication. Consistent with this finding, cybrids (i.e., cells sharing the same nuclear genetic background but differing in their mtDNA backgrounds) harboring haplogroup J mtDNA had a >2 fold increase in mtDNA copy number, as compared to cybrids containing haplogroup H, with no apparent differences in steady state levels of mtDNA-encoded transcripts. Hence, a haplogroup J regulatory region mutation affects mtDNA replication or stability, which may partially account for the phenotypic impact of this haplogroup. Our analysis thus demonstrates, for the first time, the functional impact of particular mtDNA haplogroup-defining control region mutations, paving the path towards assessing the functionality of both fixed and un-fixed genetic variants in the mitochondrial genome. Public Library of Science 2009-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC2673036/ /pubmed/19424428 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000474 Text en Suissa et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Suissa, Sarit
Wang, Zhibo
Poole, Jason
Wittkopp, Sharine
Feder, Jeanette
Shutt, Timothy E.
Wallace, Douglas C.
Shadel, Gerald S.
Mishmar, Dan
Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication
title Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication
title_full Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication
title_fullStr Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication
title_full_unstemmed Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication
title_short Ancient mtDNA Genetic Variants Modulate mtDNA Transcription and Replication
title_sort ancient mtdna genetic variants modulate mtdna transcription and replication
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2673036/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19424428
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000474
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