| Literature DB >> 27373161 |
Auke B C Otten1, Tom E J Theunissen1, Josien G Derhaag2, Ellen H Lambrichs1, Iris B W Boesten1, Marie Winandy3, Aafke P A van Montfoort2, Katsiaryna Tarbashevich4, Erez Raz4, Mike Gerards5, Jo M Vanoevelen1, Bianca J C van den Bosch1, Marc Muller3, Hubert J M Smeets6.
Abstract
We studied the mtDNA bottleneck in zebrafish to elucidate size, timing, and variation in germline and non-germline cells. Mature zebrafish oocytes contain, on average, 19.0 × 10(6) mtDNA molecules with high variation between oocytes. During embryogenesis, the mtDNA copy number decreases to ∼170 mtDNA molecules per primordial germ cell (PGC), a number similar to that in mammals, and to ∼50 per non-PGC. These occur at the same developmental stage, implying considerable variation in mtDNA copy number in (non-)PGCs of the same female, dictated by variation in the mature oocyte. The presence of oocytes with low mtDNA numbers, if similar in humans, could explain how (de novo) mutations can reach high mutation loads within a single generation. High mtDNA copy numbers in mature oocytes are established by mtDNA replication during oocyte development. Bottleneck differences between germline and non-germline cells, due to early differentiation of PGCs, may account for different distribution patterns of familial mutations.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27373161 DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2016.06.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Rep Impact factor: 9.423