| Literature DB >> 25077862 |
Perry G Ridge, Taylor J Maxwell, Spencer J Foutz, Matthew H Bailey, Christopher D Corcoran, JoAnn T Tschanz, Maria C Norton, Ronald G Munger, Elizabeth O'Brien, Richard A Kerber, Richard M Cawthon, John S K Kauwe.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The mitochondria are essential organelles and are the location of cellular respiration, which is responsible for the majority of ATP production. Each cell contains multiple mitochondria, and each mitochondrion contains multiple copies of its own circular genome. The ratio of mitochondrial genomes to nuclear genomes is referred to as mitochondrial copy number. Decreases in mitochondrial copy number are known to occur in many tissues as people age, and in certain diseases. The regulation of mitochondrial copy number by nuclear genes has been studied extensively. While mitochondrial variation has been associated with longevity and some of the diseases known to have reduced mitochondrial copy number, the role that the mitochondrial genome itself has in regulating mitochondrial copy number remains poorly understood.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25077862 PMCID: PMC4110732 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-15-S7-S6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Distribution of major mtDNA haplogroups/clusters.
| Major Haplogroup | Number | |
|---|---|---|
| H | 424 | European |
| U | 147 | European |
| T | 121 | European |
| J | 99 | European |
| K | 95 | European |
| V | 34 | European |
| I | 21 | European |
| W | 20 | European |
| HV | 18 | European |
| X | 8 | European |
| C | 5 | Asian |
| L | 4 | African |
| Missing1 | 11 |
Here we report the number of individuals belonging to each of the major haplogroups represented in our dataset along with case-control status. This Table first appeared in [51]. 1Missing major haplogroup
Demographic information for significant contrasts.
| Individuals/Missing | p-value1 | p-value2 | Age | Male/Female | Mean copy # | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whole network | 1007/193 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 75.6 | 442/565 | 2.69 |
| Branch 124 | 17/3 | 0 | 6.0e-4 | 0 | 8.0e-4 | 75.2 | 9/8 | 3.81 |
| Branch 121 | 10/1 | 0 | 0.002 | 1.0e-4 | 0.0043 | 76.3 | 4/6 | 4.01 |
| Branch 50 | 15/3 | 2.0e-4 | 0.017 | 2.0e-4 | 0.015 | 78.4 | 7/8 | 3.64 |
Here we report demographic information for each of the significant contrasts and for all the individuals in the dataset. The clade represented by Branch 121 is wholly contained within Branch 124, so these two contrasts represent a single effect. Branches 124 and 50 represent separate effects. Missing refers to the number of individuals for whom we have no mtDNA copy number measurement.1p-values were calculated controlling only for the other significant branches 2p-values were calculated using age, gender, mtDNA copy number family risk score, and the other significant effects as covariates
Figure 1Box plot comparing mitochondrial copy number between different clades. The grey dots represent the mitochondrial copy number for each member of the representative groups. The top and bottom of the boxes correspond to the 75th and 25th percentiles, respectively, and the line through the box is the median mitochondrial copy number for the group. The whiskers correspond to the maximum and minimum mitochondrial copy numbers for the group. Three different groups are represented here: the clades defined by branches 124 and 50, and a group containing all other individuals in the dataset. The y-axis is the mitochondrial copy number. The reported p-values are corrected.
Figure 2Significant branches. This is a subset of the full haplotype network (Additional File 2), focused on the two significant clades defined by branches 124 and 121, which are labeled here. The blue ovals represent haplotypes observed in our dataset, and the smaller white circles are unobserved haplotypes. Only the variants that define branches 124 and 121 are labeled.
Defining variants for the three significant contrasts.
| Branch | Nucleotide Change | Amino Acid Change | Gene |
|---|---|---|---|
| Branch 124 | m.9667A>G | p.Asn154Ser | Cytochrome C Oxidase 3 |
| Branch 121 | m.12582A>G | p.Leu82Leu | NADH Dehydrogenase 5 |
| m.12879T>C | p.Gly181Gly | NADH Dehydrogenase 5 | |
| Branch 50 | m.5277T>C | p.Phe270Leu | NADH Dehydrogenase 2 |
| m.5426T>C | p.His319His | NADH Dehydrogenase 2 | |
| m.6489C>A | p.Leu196Ile | Cytochrome C Oxidase 1 | |
| m.8270C>T | N/A | Intergenic | |
| m.del8281-8289 | N/A | Intergenic | |
| m.14458C>T | p.Ala72Ala | NADH Dehydrogenase 6 | |
| m.15028C>A | p.Leu94Leu | Cytochrome B | |
| m.15043G>A | p.Gly99Gly | Cytochrome B | |
There were three significant contrasts in our dataset, two of which, 124 and 121, which represent a single effect. One or more sequence features define each of the branches, and each is listed here with the resulting protein change, and the gene the feature is located in.
Figure 3Multiple sequence alignment of COXIII. Position 21 in the alignment corresponds to position 154 in COXIII. Background colors correspond to the level of conservation of that position in the alignment. The darker the shade of red, the higher the conservation.
Figure 4Pathways between COXIII and known regulators of mtDNA copy number. Here we show all the known pathways between COXIII and the different genes known to regulate or modify mtDNA copy number.
Figure 5Multiple sequence alignment of ND2. Position 21 in the alignment corresponds to position 270 in ND2. Background colors are as described in Figure 3.
Figure 6Multiple sequence alignment of COXI. Position 21 in the alignment corresponds to position 196 in COXI. Background colors are as described in Figure 3.
Figure 7Pathways between COXI and known regulators of mtDNA copy number. Here we show all the known pathways between COXI and the different genes known to regulate or modify mtDNA copy number.