Deleterious heteroplasmic mitochondrial mutations are associated with an increased risk of overall and cancer-specific mortality.
Yun Soo HongStephanie L BattleWen ShiDaniela PuiuVamsee PillalamarriJiaqi XieNathan D PankratzNicole J LakeMonkol LekJerome I RotterStephen S RichCharles KooperbergAlexander P ReinerPaul L AuerNancy Heard- CostaChunyu LiuMeng LaiJoanne M MurabitoDaniel LevyMegan L GroveAlvaro AlonsoRichard GibbsShannon Dugan-PerezLukasz P GondekEliseo GuallarDan E ArkingPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
Mitochondria carry their own circular genome and disruption of the mitochondrial genome is associated with various aging-related diseases. Unlike the nuclear genome, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) can be present at 1000 s to 10,000 s copies in somatic cells and variants may exist in a state of heteroplasmy, where only a fraction of the DNA molecules harbors a particular variant. We quantify mtDNA heteroplasmy in 194,871 participants in the UK Biobank and find that heteroplasmy is associated with a 1.5-fold increased risk of all-cause mortality. Additionally, we functionally characterize mtDNA single nucleotide variants (SNVs) using a constraint-based score, mitochondrial local constraint score sum (MSS) and find it associated with all-cause mortality, and with the prevalence and incidence of cancer and cancer-related mortality, particularly leukemia. These results indicate that mitochondria may have a functional role in certain cancers, and mitochondrial heteroplasmic SNVs may serve as a prognostic marker for cancer, especially for leukemia.
Keyphrases
- mitochondrial dna
- copy number
- genome wide
- papillary thyroid
- oxidative stress
- risk factors
- squamous cell
- dna methylation
- bone marrow
- acute myeloid leukemia
- cell death
- cardiovascular events
- induced apoptosis
- squamous cell carcinoma
- cell cycle arrest
- lymph node metastasis
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular disease
- gene expression
- single molecule
- childhood cancer
- reactive oxygen species