scholarly journals The complete mitochondrial genome of Hapalogenys analis (Perciformes, Haemulidea) except for control region, obtained by whole genome sequencing

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 2807-2808
Author(s):  
Yunya Zheng ◽  
Linxiao Feng ◽  
Haoyu Liu ◽  
Riyu Song ◽  
Shengyong Xu ◽  
...  
F1000Research ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 1343
Author(s):  
Snaydia Viegas Resende ◽  
Rubens Pasa ◽  
Fabiano Bezerra Menegídio ◽  
John Seymour (Pat) Heslop-Harrison ◽  
Trude Schwarzacher ◽  
...  

Brycon nattereri is a Brazilian fish species of the order Characiformes (Bryconidae). Like others in the genus, B. nattereri is classified as "vulnerable" on the red list of endangered species. For this work, we collected a sample of B. nattereri from the Upper Paraná and São Francisco river basins, identified it and registered in an ichthyology collection. Whole genome sequencing was performed by Illumina. The raw reads were assembled with Novoplasty and the sequence annotated with MitoAnnotator. This is the third complete mitochondrial genome described for the genus and is available on GenBank: MT428073.1 and MT428074.1.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie L Battle ◽  
Daniela Puiu ◽  
Eric Boerwinkle ◽  
Kent Taylor ◽  
Jerome Rotter ◽  
...  

Mitochondrial diseases are a heterogeneous group of disorders that can be caused by mutations in the nuclear or mitochondrial genome. Mitochondrial DNA variants may exist in a state of heteroplasmy, where a percentage of DNA molecules harbor a variant, or homoplasmy, where all DNA molecules have a variant. The relative quantity of mtDNA in a cell, or copy number (mtDNA-CN), is associated with mitochondrial function, human disease, and mortality. To facilitate accurate identification of heteroplasmy and quantify mtDNA-CN, we built a bioinformatics pipeline that takes whole genome sequencing data and outputs mitochondrial variants, and mtDNA-CN. We incorporate variant annotations to facilitate determination of variant significance. Our pipeline yields uniform coverage by remapping to a circularized chrM and recovering reads falsely mapped to nuclear-encoded mitochondrial sequences. Notably, we construct a consensus chrM sequence for each sample and recall heteroplasmy against the sample's unique mitochondrial genome. We observe an approximately 3-fold increased association with age for heteroplasmic variants in non-homopolymer regions and, are better able to capture genetic variation in the D-loop of chrM compared to existing software. Our bioinformatics pipeline more accurately captures features of mitochondrial genetics than existing pipelines that are important in understanding how mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to disease.


Gene ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 699 ◽  
pp. 145-154 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mengqin Duan ◽  
Liang Chen ◽  
Qinyu Ge ◽  
Na Lu ◽  
Junji Li ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 167-169
Author(s):  
Ammar Husami ◽  
Jesse Slone ◽  
Jenice Brown ◽  
Meghan Bromwell ◽  
C. Alexander Valencia ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Clare Puttick ◽  
Kishore R Kumar ◽  
Ryan L Davis ◽  
Mark Pinese ◽  
David M Thomas ◽  
...  

AbstractMotivationMitochondrial diseases (MDs) are the most common group of inherited metabolic disorders and are often challenging to diagnose due to extensive genotype-phenotype heterogeneity. MDs are caused by mutations in the nuclear or mitochondrial genome, where pathogenic mitochondrial variants are usually heteroplasmic and typically at much lower allelic fraction in the blood than affected tissues. Both genomes can now be readily analysed using unbiased whole genome sequencing (WGS), but most nuclear variant detection methods fail to detect low heteroplasmy variants in the mitochondrial genome.ResultsWe present mity, a bioinformatics pipeline for detecting and interpreting heteroplasmic SNVs and INDELs in the mitochondrial genome using WGS data. In 2,980 healthy controls, we observed on average 3,166× coverage in the mitochondrial genome using WGS from blood. mity utilises this high depth to detect pathogenic mitochondrial variants, even at low heteroplasmy. mity enables easy interpretation of mitochondrial variants and can be incorporated into existing diagnostic WGS pipelines. This could simplify the diagnostic pathway, avoid invasive tissue biopsies and increase the diagnostic rate for MDs and other conditions caused by impaired mitochondrial function.Availabilitymity is available from https://github.com/KCCG/mityunder an MIT [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]


Author(s):  
Hansi Weissensteiner ◽  
Lukas Forer ◽  
Liane Fendt ◽  
Azin Kheirkhah ◽  
Antonio Salas ◽  
...  

AbstractWithin-species contamination is a major issue in sequencing studies, especially for mitochondrial studies. Contamination can be detected by analysing the nuclear genome or by inspecting the heteroplasmic sites in the mitochondrial genome. Existing methods using the nuclear genome are computationally expensive, and no suitable tool for detecting contamination in large-scale mitochondrial datasets is available. Here we present haplocheck, a tool that requires only the mitochondrial genome to detect contamination in both mitochondrial and whole-genome sequencing studies. Haplocheck is able to distinguish between contaminated and real heteroplasmic sites using the mitochondrial phylogeny. By applying haplocheck to the 1000 Genomes Project data, we show (1) high concordance in contamination estimates between mitochondrial and nuclear DNA and (2) quantify the impact of mitochondrial copy numbers on the mitochondrial based contamination results. Haplocheck complements leading nuclear DNA based contamination tools, and can therefore be used as a proxy tool in nuclear genome studies.Haplocheck is available both as a command-line tool at https://github.com/genepi/haplocheck and as a cloud web-service producing interactive reports that facilitates the navigation through the phylogeny of contaminated samples.


2021 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. S240
Author(s):  
Fen Guo ◽  
Evangeline Voultsis ◽  
Daniel Lesperance ◽  
Supan Kaur ◽  
Daniel Croft ◽  
...  

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