Abstract

Impairments of mitochondrial genome are associated with a wide spectrum of degenerative diseases, development of tumors, aging, and cell death. We studied the content of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) with mutations and the total content of mutations in the brain and the spleen of mice subjected to X-ray irradiation at a dose of 1–5 Gy at 8–28 days after treatment. In these mice, we studied the number of mutant copies of extracellular mtDNA (ec-mtDNA) and its total content in blood plasma. We estimated mutations in control and irradiated mice using cleavage of heteroduplexes prepared by hybridization of PCR amplicons of mtDNA (D-loop region) mediated by CEL-I endonuclease, an enzyme that specifically cleaves unpaired bases. Changes in the total number of mtDNA copies relative to nuclear DNA were assessed by real time PCR using the ND-4 and GAPDH genes, respectively. We found that the number of mutant mtDNA copies was significantly increased in the brain and the spleen of irradiated mice and reached the maximum level at the eighth day after treatment; it then decreased by the 28th day after treatment. In nuclear genes similar to mutagenesis, mutagenesis of mtDNA in the brain and spleen tissues linearly depended on irradiation dose. In contrast to mutant nuclear genes, most mutant mtDNA copies were eliminated in the brain and spleen tissues, whereas the total content of mtDNA did not change within 28 days after irradiation. Our data show that, during this period, a high level of ec-mtDNA with mutations was observed in DNA circulating in blood plasma with the maximum level found at the 14th day. We suppose that mutant mtDNA copies are eliminated from cells of animals subjected to irradiation during the posttreatment period. Higher content of ec-mtDNA in blood plasma can be considered as a potential marker of radiation damage to the body.

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