Abstract

BackgroundThe mitochondria are essential organelles and are the location of cellular respiration, which is responsible for the majority of ATP production. Each cell contains multiple mitochondria, and each mitochondrion contains multiple copies of its own circular genome. The ratio of mitochondrial genomes to nuclear genomes is referred to as mitochondrial copy number. Decreases in mitochondrial copy number are known to occur in many tissues as people age, and in certain diseases. The regulation of mitochondrial copy number by nuclear genes has been studied extensively. While mitochondrial variation has been associated with longevity and some of the diseases known to have reduced mitochondrial copy number, the role that the mitochondrial genome itself has in regulating mitochondrial copy number remains poorly understood.ResultsWe analyzed the complete mitochondrial genomes from 1007 individuals randomly selected from the Cache County Study on Memory Health and Aging utilizing the inferred evolutionary history of the mitochondrial haplotypes present in our dataset to identify sequence variation and mitochondrial haplotypes associated with changes in mitochondrial copy number. Three variants belonging to mitochondrial haplogroups U5A1 and T2 were significantly associated with higher mitochondrial copy number in our dataset.ConclusionsWe identified three variants associated with higher mitochondrial copy number and suggest several hypotheses for how these variants influence mitochondrial copy number by interacting with known regulators of mitochondrial copy number. Our results are the first to report sequence variation in the mitochondrial genome that causes changes in mitochondrial copy number. The identification of these variants that increase mtDNA copy number has important implications in understanding the pathological processes that underlie these phenotypes.

Highlights

  • The mitochondria are essential organelles and are the location of cellular respiration, which is responsible for the majority of ATP production

  • Mitochondria are the location of the citric acid or Krebs Cycle, which produces the majority of ATP for cellular work

  • Our results identify association between mitochondrial haplogroups U5A1 and T2 and increased mtDNA copy numbers

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Summary

Introduction

The mitochondria are essential organelles and are the location of cellular respiration, which is responsible for the majority of ATP production. Decreases in mitochondrial copy number are known to occur in many tissues as people age, and in certain diseases. The regulation of mitochondrial copy number by nuclear genes has been studied extensively. Each cell has multiple mitochondria and each mitochondrion contains one or more copies of its own circular genome (mtDNA), which is 16569 bases in length and encodes 37 genes. Depending on the severity of the mutation, proportion of wild type versus affected mitochondria, and the specific tissue, there may or may not be a disease phenotype. In addition to inherited mtDNA variation, mtDNA is prone to somatic mutations [16], and if affected mtDNA are propagated they can eventually reach a threshold at which mitochondrial function is insufficient to support normal cellular functions and disease appears.

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