| Literature DB >> 21049272 |
Cornelya F C Klütsch1, Eija H Seppälä, Mathias Uhlén, Hannes Lohi, Peter Savolainen.
Abstract
Heteroplasmy, the presence of two or more variants in an organism, may render mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)-based individual identification challenging in forensic analysis. However, the variation of heteroplasmic proportions and the segregation of heteroplasmic variants through generations and within families have not been systematically described at a large scale in animals such as the domestic dog. Therefore, we performed the largest study to date in domestic dogs and screened a 582-bp-long fragment of the mtDNA control region in 180 individuals in 58 pedigrees for signs of heteroplasmy. We identified three pedigrees (5.17%) with heteroplasmic point mutations. To follow the segregation of the point mutations, we then analyzed 131 samples from these three independent pedigrees and found significant differences in heteroplasmy between generations and among siblings. Frequently (10% of cases), the proportion of one base changed from 0-10% to 80-90% (as judged from Sanger electropherograms) between generations and varied to a similar extent among siblings. We included also a literature review of heteroplasmic and potential mutational hot spot positions in the studied region which showed that all heteroplasmic positions appear to be mutational hot spots. Thus, although heteroplasmy may be used to increase the significance of a match in forensic case work, it may also cause erroneous exclusion of related individuals because of sharp switches from one state to the other within a single generation or among siblings especially in the presented mutational hot spots.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21049272 PMCID: PMC3115052 DOI: 10.1007/s00414-010-0524-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Legal Med ISSN: 0937-9827 Impact factor: 2.686
Fig. 1Simplified pedigrees A, B, and C. Squares males, circles females, black filled squares/circles sampled males/females. Vertical lines present one generation; the number of horizontal lines crossing vertical lines indicates additional generations. The dashed line in pedigree B indicates that the sample Z1766 belongs to this pedigree, but the exact number of generations is unknown. The dashed box in pedigree C indicates that only in this part of the pedigree heteroplasmic sequences are found. Numbers 1–10 refer to the litters given in Table 1
The range and difference of heteroplasmic proportions between dogs from the same litter
| Litter | Individual | Position | Mean proportion height peaks | Range and (difference) of proportion within litter |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Z2203 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 40%; – 60% | 0–100 (100) |
| Z1770 | pos 15,931 A→− | −100% | ||
| Z2205 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | ||
| 2 | Z2210 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | 40–100 (60) |
| Z2211 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | ||
| Z2202 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | ||
| Z2206 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | ||
| Z2208 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | ||
| Z2209 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 40%; - 60% | ||
| 3 | Y445 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 30%; - 70% | 0–30 (30) |
| Y463 | pos 15,931 A→− | −100% | ||
| Y448 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 10%; - 90% | ||
| Y462 | pos 15,931 A→− | −100% | ||
| 4 | Y433 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 70%; - 30% | 10–70 (60) |
| Z2189 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 10%; - 90% | ||
| Z2159 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 30%; - 70% | ||
| 5 | Z2195 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 30%; - 70% | 30–90 (60) |
| Z2204 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 30%; - 70% | ||
| Y440 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 90%; - 10% | ||
| Z2168 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 60%; - 40% | ||
| 6 | Z2177 | pos 15,931 A→− | −100% | 0–10 (10) |
| Z1761 | pos 15,931 A→− | −100% | ||
| Z2187 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 10%; - 90% | ||
| 7 | Z2157 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 30%; - 70% | 20–100 (80) |
| Z2160 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | ||
| Z2161 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 90%; - 10% | ||
| Z2149 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 20%; - 80% | ||
| Z2170 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 20%; - 80% | ||
| 8 | Y443 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 10%; - 90% | 10–60 (50) |
| Y449 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 10%; - 90% | ||
| Y444 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 60%; - 40% | ||
| 9 | Z2197 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 20%; - 80% | 20–100 (80) |
| Z2143 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 70%; - 30% | ||
| Z2166 | pos 15,931 A→− | A 100% | ||
| 10 | Z2137 | pos 15,639 G→A | G 40% A 60% | All 40% (0) |
| Z2027 | pos 15,639 G→A | G 40% A 60% | ||
| Z2163 | pos 15,639 G→A | G 40% A 60% |
Fig. 2Difference of heteroplasmic proportions among mother–offspring pairs in percent
A review of heteroplasmic positions and potential mutational hot spots within the 582-bp segment of the control region
| Positiona | Bases/indel (−) at position | Heteroplasmyb | Number of mutations [ | Number of mutations [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15,931 | A/G/− | Yes [ | NA | 5× (A–D) |
| 15,639e | A/T/G/C | Yes; present study | 6× (A/T/G) | 6× (A–D) |
| 16,003 | A/G | Yes; present study | 1× | 3× (B–D) |
| 15,620 | C/T | Yes [ | 2× | 1× (A) |
| 15,635 | A/G | Yes [ | 0× | 1× (A) |
| 15,814 | C/T | Yes [ | 1× | 1× (A) |
| 15,553 | A/G | No | 2× | 3× (A–C) |
| 15,955e | C/T | No | 4× | 2× (A and D) |
| 15,627e | A/G | No | 3× | 1× (A) |
| 15,484 | A/T/G | No | 0× | 2× (A) |
| 15,631 | A/T/G | No | 0× | 2× (A) |
aPositions showing heteroplasmy or identified as potential mutational hot spots, in nps 15,458–16,039. The review concerns only the 582-bp segment common to all studies. See respective papers [19, 35, 41, 51] for other heteroplasmic positions, length heteroplasmy, or mutational hot spots outside this region.
bHeteroplasmic positions identified in the present study, in Wetton et al. (2003; [20]), and in Eichmann and Parson (2007; [35])
cPotential mutational hot spot positions identified in Gundry et al. (2007; [41]). See points 3 and 4 in main text for definition of “potential mutational hot spot”. NA not available
dPotential mutational hot spot positions identified in Pang et al. (2009; [26])
ePotential mutational hot spot positions mentioned in Eichmann and Parson (2007; [35])