59: Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is largely conserved at birth with rare de novo mutations in neonates

2015 ◽  
Vol 212 (1) ◽  
pp. S40-S41
Author(s):  
Jun Ma ◽  
Kjersti Aagaard ◽  
Heidi Purcell ◽  
Lori Showalter ◽  
James Versalovic
2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. S23
Author(s):  
A. Gravina ◽  
T. Deuse ◽  
X. Hu ◽  
S. Agbor-Enoh ◽  
M. Koch ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Monica Sanchez-Contreras ◽  
Mariya T Sweetwyne ◽  
Brendan F Kohrn ◽  
Kristine A Tsantilas ◽  
Michael J Hipp ◽  
...  

Abstract Mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) cause maternally inherited diseases, while somatic mutations are linked to common diseases of aging. Although mtDNA mutations impact health, the processes that give rise to them are under considerable debate. To investigate the mechanism by which de novo mutations arise, we analyzed the distribution of naturally occurring somatic mutations across the mouse and human mtDNA obtained by Duplex Sequencing. We observe distinct mutational gradients in G→A and T→C transitions delimited by the light-strand origin and the mitochondrial Control Region (mCR). The gradient increases unequally across the mtDNA with age and is lost in the absence of DNA polymerase γ proofreading activity. In addition, high-resolution analysis of the mCR shows that important regulatory elements exhibit considerable variability in mutation frequency, consistent with them being mutational ‘hot-spots’ or ‘cold-spots’. Collectively, these patterns support genome replication via a deamination prone asymmetric strand-displacement mechanism as the fundamental driver of mutagenesis in mammalian DNA. Moreover, the distribution of mtDNA single nucleotide polymorphisms in humans and the distribution of bases in the mtDNA across vertebrate species mirror this gradient, indicating that replication-linked mutations are likely the primary source of inherited polymorphisms that, over evolutionary timescales, influences genome composition during speciation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 116 (50) ◽  
pp. 25172-25178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arslan A. Zaidi ◽  
Peter R. Wilton ◽  
Marcia Shu-Wei Su ◽  
Ian M. Paul ◽  
Barbara Arbeithuber ◽  
...  

Heteroplasmy—the presence of multiple mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotypes in an individual—can lead to numerous mitochondrial diseases. The presentation of such diseases depends on the frequency of the heteroplasmic variant in tissues, which, in turn, depends on the dynamics of mtDNA transmissions during germline and somatic development. Thus, understanding and predicting these dynamics between generations and within individuals is medically relevant. Here, we study patterns of heteroplasmy in 2 tissues from each of 345 humans in 96 multigenerational families, each with, at least, 2 siblings (a total of 249 mother–child transmissions). This experimental design has allowed us to estimate the timing of mtDNA mutations, drift, and selection with unprecedented precision. Our results are remarkably concordant between 2 complementary population-genetic approaches. We find evidence for a severe germline bottleneck (7–10 mtDNA segregating units) that occurs independently in different oocyte lineages from the same mother, while somatic bottlenecks are less severe. We demonstrate that divergence between mother and offspring increases with the mother’s age at childbirth, likely due to continued drift of heteroplasmy frequencies in oocytes under meiotic arrest. We show that this period is also accompanied by mutation accumulation leading to more de novo mutations in children born to older mothers. We show that heteroplasmic variants at intermediate frequencies can segregate for many generations in the human population, despite the strong germline bottleneck. We show that selection acts during germline development to keep the frequency of putatively deleterious variants from rising. Our findings have important applications for clinical genetics and genetic counseling.


1994 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 110
Author(s):  
Qi Yu ◽  
Chen Qingtang ◽  
Li Xiaodong ◽  
Wu Xiru

2019 ◽  
Vol 37 (10) ◽  
pp. 1137-1144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tobias Deuse ◽  
Xiaomeng Hu ◽  
Sean Agbor-Enoh ◽  
Martina Koch ◽  
Matthew H. Spitzer ◽  
...  

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