Abstract

Mutations create genetic variation for other evolutionary forces to operate on and cause numerous genetic diseases. Nevertheless, how de novo mutations arise remains poorly understood. Progress in the area is hindered by the fact that error rates of conventional sequencing technologies (1 in 100 or 1,000 base pairs) are several orders of magnitude higher than de novo mutation rates (1 in 10,000,000 or 100,000,000 base pairs per generation). Moreover, previous analyses of germline de novo mutations examined pedigrees (and not germ cells) and thus were likely affected by selection. Here, we applied highly accurate duplex sequencing to detect low-frequency, de novo mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) directly from oocytes and from somatic tissues (brain and muscle) of 36 mice from two independent pedigrees. We found mtDNA mutation frequencies 2- to 3-fold higher in 10-month-old than in 1-month-old mice, demonstrating mutation accumulation during the period of only 9 mo. Mutation frequencies and patterns differed between germline and somatic tissues and among mtDNA regions, suggestive of distinct mutagenesis mechanisms. Additionally, we discovered a more pronounced genetic drift of mitochondrial genetic variants in the germline of older versus younger mice, arguing for mtDNA turnover during oocyte meiotic arrest. Our study deciphered for the first time the intricacies of germline de novo mutagenesis using duplex sequencing directly in oocytes, which provided unprecedented resolution and minimized selection effects present in pedigree studies. Moreover, our work provides important information about the origins and accumulation of mutations with aging/maturation and has implications for delayed reproduction in modern human societies. Furthermore, the duplex sequencing method we optimized for single cells opens avenues for investigating low-frequency mutations in other studies.

Highlights

  • Mutations generate genetic variation, making evolution possible

  • At the time of sample collection, the age of the mothers was approximately 10 months, and the age of the pups was approximately 20 days. mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) from brain and muscle was studied for every animal

  • Utilizing a highly accurate duplex sequencing method, we were able to study in detail both age-related accumulation of putative de novo mutations and changes in allele frequencies for inherited variants in mouse mtDNA

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Summary

Introduction

Mutations generate genetic variation, making evolution possible. Substantial progress has been made in our understanding of mutation rates and patterns because of the application of generation sequencing (NGS) to interspecies genomic alignments (reviewed in [1]), familial trios [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9], mutation accumulation lines (reviewed in [10]), and mutator animal models [11,12]. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that, in humans, nuclear germline mutations increase in frequency with both paternal and maternal age [2,3,4,5,7,9], a conclusion that is highly relevant to modern societies in which delayed reproduction has become common. Without evidence gleaned directly from oocytes, the increased frequency of de novo genetic variants in the offspring could be due to decreased selective constraints, rather than to enhanced mutagenesis, in the germline of older mothers. We currently lack such direct evidence from oocytes for nuclear DNA and for the mitochondrial genome

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