While it is well understood that mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletion mutations cause incurable diseases and contribute to aging, little is known about the transcriptional products that arise from these DNA structural variants. We hypothesized that mitochondrial genomes containing deletion mutations express chimeric mitochondrial RNAs. To test this, we analyzed human and rat RNA sequencing data to identify, quantitate, and characterize chimeric mitochondrial RNAs. We observed increased chimeric mitochondrial RNA frequency in samples from patients with mitochondrial genetic diseases and in samples from aged humans. The spectrum of chimeric mitochondrial transcripts reflected the known pattern of mtDNA deletion mutations. To test the hypothesis that mtDNA deletions induce chimeric RNA transcripts, we treated 18 mo and 34 mo rats with guanidinopropionic acid to induce high levels of skeletal muscle mtDNA deletion mutations. With mtDNA deletion induction, we demonstrate that the chimeric mitochondrial transcript frequency also increased and correlated strongly with an orthogonal DNA-based mutation assay performed on identical samples. Further, we show that the frequency of chimeric mitochondrial transcripts predicts expression of both nuclear and mitochondrial genes central to mitochondrial function, demonstrating the utility of these events as metrics of age-induced metabolic change. Mapping and quantitation of chimeric mitochondrial RNAs provides an accessible, orthogonal approach to DNA-based mutation assays, offers a potential method for identifying mitochondrial pathology in widely accessible datasets, and opens a new area of study in mitochondrial genetics and transcriptomics.
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