| Literature DB >> 27721743 |
Ananta Paine1, Manoj Kumar Jaiswal2.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: mitochondria; mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA); mitochondrial gene transfer (MGT); mitochondrial replacement techniques (MRT); mitotherapy; neurodegenerative disease
Year: 2016 PMID: 27721743 PMCID: PMC5033957 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2016.00219
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1Mitochondrial replacement for neurodegenerative diseases. (A) Problems associated with mutations in mitochondrial DNA leads to generation of toxic ROS which impair calcium homeostasis. Oxidative stress build up, in turns impair balance between fusion and fission of mitochondria accelerating vicious cycle of mitochondrial damage ultimately affecting survival and function of neurons and results in cell death leading to many neurodegenerative diseases. (B) MRT currently involves different strategies such as pronuclear transfer (PNT), spindle transfer (ST) (C) polar body transfer and other related techniques for mitochondrial modifications. Pronuclei (PN) are membrane-enclosed entities in the zygote of mammals that house the male and female chromosomal contributions. In PNT, pronuclei are removed from single-cell stage embryo at day one and transferred to a second embryo created using a donor egg with healthy mitochondria. This tailored embryo can develop and transferred into mother. In ST technique, first spindle from donor and mtDNA-carrying unfertilized oocytes are extracted into karyoplasts and thereafter karyoplasts from patient oocytes are fused to donor cytoplasts and fertilized with the partner's sperm to create mtDNA-mutation free embryos. During meiosis, mammalian oocytes undergoes two reductive divisions with uneven cytoplasmic segregration giving rise to two small cells containing DNA known as polar bodies (PB)s which eventually disintegrates. The first PB (PB1) contains a diploid set of chromosome whereby the second polar body (PB2) contains a haploid set. In PBT techniques, transfer of PB1 and PB2 into appropriate oocyte or zygotic cytoplasm supports the normal completion of meiosis giving rise to the viable offspring after completion of its full term development. Advance genomics tools such as Transcription Activators like effector nucleases (TALENs), and CRISPR/Cas edited iPS cells with corrected mutations in mitochondrial DNA possibly can overcome some of technical challenges MRT facing right now. MRT can be achieved by germ cell (preventive) and stem cell (curative) modifications. (C) Major challenges of MRT are: (a) heteroplasmy and reversal, (b) incompatibility and alloreactivity, (c) inapplicability of some techniques in human cells, and (d) accumulated mutations in mitochondria.