Abstract
Abstract
Background
Acquired human mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) deletions are symptoms and drivers of focal mitochondrial respiratory deficiency, a pathological hallmark of aging and late-onset mitochondrial disease.
Results
To decipher connections between these processes, we create LostArc, an ultrasensitive method for quantifying deletions in circular mtDNA molecules. LostArc reveals 35 million deletions (~ 470,000 unique spans) in skeletal muscle from 22 individuals with and 19 individuals without pathogenic variants in POLG. This nuclear gene encodes the catalytic subunit of replicative mitochondrial DNA polymerase γ. Ablation, the deleted mtDNA fraction, suffices to explain skeletal muscle phenotypes of aging and POLG-derived disease. Unsupervised bioinformatic analyses reveal distinct age- and disease-correlated deletion patterns.
Conclusions
These patterns implicate replication by DNA polymerase γ as the deletion driver and suggest little purifying selection against mtDNA deletions by mitophagy in postmitotic muscle fibers. Observed deletion patterns are best modeled as mtDNA deletions initiated by replication fork stalling during strand displacement mtDNA synthesis.
Funder
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Wellcome Trust Centre for Mitochondrial Research
Medical Research Council International Centre for Genomic Medicine in Neuromuscular Disease
Mitochondrial Disease Patient Cohort
NIHR Newcastle Biomedical Research Centre
Lily Foundation
UK NHS Highly Specialised Service for Rare Mitochondrial Disorders of Adults and Children
NIHR postdoctoral fellowship
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
52 articles.
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