Abstract

BackgroundMitochondria are ancient endosymbiotic organelles crucial to eukaryotic growth and metabolism. The mammalian mitochondrial genome encodes for 13 mitochondrial proteins, and the remaining mitochondrial proteins are encoded by the nuclear genome. Little is known about how coordination between the expression of the two sets of genes is achieved.ResultsCorrelation analysis of RNA-seq expression data from large publicly available datasets is a common method to leverage genetic diversity to infer gene co-expression modules. Here we use this method to investigate nuclear-mitochondrial gene expression coordination. We identify a pitfall in correlation analysis that results from the large variation in the proportion of transcripts from the mitochondrial genome in RNA-seq data. Commonly used normalisation techniques based on total read counts, such as FPKM or TPM, produce artefactual negative correlations between mitochondrial- and nuclear-encoded transcripts. This also results in artefactual correlations between pairs of nuclear-encoded genes, with important consequences for inferring co-expression modules beyond mitochondria. We show that these effects can be overcome by normalizing using the median-ratio normalisation (MRN) or trimmed mean of M values (TMM) methods. Using these normalisations, we find only weak and inconsistent correlations between mitochondrial and nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes in the majority of healthy human tissues from the GTEx database.ConclusionsWe show that a subset of healthy tissues with high expression of NF-κB show significant coordination, suggesting a role for NF-κB in ensuring balanced expression between mitochondrial and nuclear genes. Contrastingly, most cancer types show robust coordination of nuclear and mitochondrial OXPHOS gene expression, identifying this as a feature of gene regulation in cancer.

Highlights

  • Mitochondria are ancient endosymbiotic organelles crucial to eukaryotic growth and metabolism

  • The majority of proteins with mitochondrial localisation are encoded by the nuclear genome, including over 100 genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation in humans

  • Using tens of thousands of RNA-seq samples across 48 healthy human tissues from the Genotype Expression Project (GTEx) database and 31 distinct cancer types from the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), we examined the correlation of mtOXPHOS and nuOXPHOS expression to identify signs of co-regulation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Mitochondria are ancient endosymbiotic organelles crucial to eukaryotic growth and metabolism. Human mtDNA contains 24 genes encoding for ribosomal and transfer RNAs and 13 protein-coding genes, all of which are involved in oxidative phosphorylation (hereafter mtOXPHOS genes). The majority of proteins with mitochondrial localisation are encoded by the nuclear genome, including over 100 genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation (nuOXPHOS genes) in humans. The mtOXPHOS and nuOXPHOS genes are obligate partners in catalysis within protein complexes with a defined stoichiometry; their expression should be coordinated in order to maximise cell growth and function. While retrograde signalling has been characterised in the case of overt mitochondrial function dysfunction or depletion in yeast [3], Caenorhabditis elegans [4], Drosophila [5] and mammals [6, 7], little is known about whether retrograde signalling functions to co-ordinate mtOXPHOS and nuOXPHOS gene expression under normal physiological conditions

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.