High-throughput single-cell analysis reveals progressive mitochondrial DNA mosaicism throughout life.
Angelos GlynosLyuba V BozhilovaMichele FrisonStephen P BurrJames Bruce StewartPatrick F ChinneryPublished in: Science advances (2023)
Heteroplasmic mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations are a major cause of inherited disease and contribute to common late-onset human disorders. The late onset and clinical progression of mtDNA-associated disease is thought to be due to changing heteroplasmy levels, but it is not known how and when this occurs. Performing high-throughput single-cell genotyping in two mouse models of human mtDNA disease, we saw unanticipated cell-to-cell differences in mtDNA heteroplasmy levels that emerged prenatally and progressively increased throughout life. Proliferating spleen cells and nondividing brain cells had a similar single-cell heteroplasmy variance, implicating mtDNA or organelle turnover as the major force determining cell heteroplasmy levels. The two different mtDNA mutations segregated at different rates with no evidence of selection, consistent with different rates of random genetic drift in vivo, leading to the accumulation of cells with a very high mutation burden at different rates. This provides an explanation for differences in severity seen in human diseases caused by similar mtDNA mutations.
Keyphrases
- mitochondrial dna
- single cell
- copy number
- high throughput
- late onset
- rna seq
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- early onset
- genome wide
- cell cycle arrest
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- pluripotent stem cells
- cell therapy
- multiple sclerosis
- stem cells
- oxidative stress
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- body composition
- cerebral ischemia
- pi k akt
- neural network