Abstract

SummaryA mutant mitochondrial genome arising amid the pool of mitochondrial genomes within a cell must compete with existing genomes to survive to the next generation. Even weak selective forces can bias transmission of one genome over another to affect the inheritance of mitochondrial diseases and guide the evolution of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Studies in several systems suggested that purifying selection in the female germline reduces transmission of detrimental mitochondrial mutations [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7]. In contrast, some selfish genomes can take over despite a cost to host fitness [8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13]. Within individuals, the outcome of competition is therefore influenced by multiple selective forces. The nuclear genome, which encodes most proteins within mitochondria, and all external regulators of mitochondrial biogenesis and dynamics can influence the competition between mitochondrial genomes [14, 15, 16, 17, 18], yet little is known about how this works. Previously, we established a Drosophila line transmitting two mitochondrial genomes in a stable ratio enforced by purifying selection benefiting one genome and a selfish advantage favoring the other [8]. Here, to find nuclear genes that impact mtDNA competition, we screened heterozygous deletions tiling ∼70% of the euchromatic regions and examined their influence on this ratio. This genome-wide screen detected many nuclear modifiers of this ratio and identified one as the catalytic subunit of mtDNA polymerase gene (POLG), tam. A reduced dose of tam drove elimination of defective mitochondrial genomes. This study suggests that our approach will uncover targets for interventions that would block propagation of pathogenic mitochondrial mutations.

Highlights

  • For the screen, 339 deletion chromosomes covering most of chromosomes II and III were introduced into the heteroplasmic flies (Table S1)

  • We reasoned that a balance of two selective forces would be very sensitive to perturbation

  • More than 10% of the tested lines changed the mt:yak percentage, leading us to conclude that multiple nuclear factors directly or indirectly regulate competition between mitochondrial genomes

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Summary

Introduction

339 deletion chromosomes covering most of chromosomes II and III were introduced into the heteroplasmic flies (Table S1). Sixty-three crosses produced no or few progeny carrying the deletion (Table S1). It is likely that the lethality for some of the crosses was due to an inability to maintain the functional mt:yak genome, here we focus only on the 276 lines that produced progeny; in these, we measured the mt:yak percentage in adult males one generation after the deletion was introduced (i.e., generation 2; Figure 1B). Five lines had a substantially higher percentage of mt:yak (R 10%), whereas 33 lines had a lower percentage (% 2%) (Tables S2 and S3). More than 10% of the tested lines changed the mt:yak percentage, leading us to conclude that multiple nuclear factors directly or indirectly regulate competition between mitochondrial genome

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