| Literature DB >> 31652817 |
Abstract
It is becoming increasingly apparent that cells require cooperation between the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes to promote effective function. However, it was long thought that the mitochondrial genome was under the strict control of the nuclear genome and the mitochondrial genome had little influence on cell fate unless it was extensively mutated, as in the case of the mitochondrial DNA diseases. However, as our understanding of the roles that epigenetic regulators, including DNA methylation, and metabolism play in cell fate and function, the role of the mitochondrial genome appears to have a greater influence than previously thought. In this review, I draw on examples from tumorigenesis, stem cells, and oocyte pre- and post-fertilisation events to discuss how modulating one genome affects the other and that this results in a compromise to produce functional mature cells. I propose that, during development, both of the genomes interact with each other through intermediaries to establish genomic balance and that establishing genomic balance is a key facet in determining cell fate and viability.Entities:
Keywords: Mitochondrial DNA; assisted reproduction; genomic balance; mtDNA copy number; oocyte; stem cell; tumour
Year: 2019 PMID: 31652817 PMCID: PMC6912345 DOI: 10.3390/cells8111306
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1DNA methylation and mtDNA replication. Primordial germ cells, the very first germ cells laid down, possess very few copies of mtDNA. During oogenesis, mtDNA copy number increases exponentially to cross the threshold (broken blue line) that is required for the mature, metaphase II oocyte to complete fertilisation and preimplantation development. Throughout preimplantation development, mtDNA copy number decreases and mtDNA replication is then initiated at the blastocyst stage, but this is restricted to the trophectodermal cells. On the other hand, the cells of the inner cell mass continue to reduce mtDNA copy number. As a result, the developing embryo establishes the mtDNA set point, the founder molecules of mtDNA that contribute to the cells, tissues and organs of the foetus and offspring, which takes place before differentiation. Once naïve cells commit to a specific lineage, mtDNA replication takes place in a cell-specific manner, which allows cells to perform their specialized functions by allowing them to utilise oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), if required. To this extent, cells (heart, muscle, neurons) that primarily have a high requirement for ATP through OXPHOS will have high mtDNA copy number and those with a low requirement for OXPHOS (blood) will tend to have lower mtDNA copy number and predominantly utilise glycolysis. Throughout development, there are synchronous changes to DNA methylation and gene expression. Translocation methylcytosine dioxygenases (TET) enzymes are responsible for erasing parental DNA methylation patterns through to the blastocyst stage. However, the de novo methyltransferases, for example DNMT3a and DNMT3b mediate de novo DNA methylation through preimplantation development and onwards. DNMT1 is then employed to maintain cell-specific DNA methylation profiles.
Figure 2The mtDNA replication trap. Tumour-initiating cells are frequently unable to complete differentiation. Consequently, they are trapped between a naïve and a differentiated state. However, some DNA demethylation agents act by resetting the epigenome and mtDNA copy number in these cells, which then allows for the cell to differentiate into its mature phenotype with both the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes acting in synchrony.
Figure 3Model of genomic balance. At any given stage in development, for a cell to be ultimately functional, it needs to establish genomic balance. There is a continual flow of regulatory information between the nucleus and the mitochondrial genome that ensures there are sufficient copies of mtDNA to meet a cell’s functional requirements for ATP through OXPHOS. At the level of the nuclear genome, genomic balance is mediated by epigenetic changes, for example the levels of DNA methylation, which control gene expression. Other factors include DNA rearrangements, such as mutations and deletions, and copy number variants. At the level of the mitochondrial genome, the choice of cellular metabolism will affect mtDNA copy number, which, in turn, is aided by the cell’s mtDNA genotype. As a result, metabolic factors are released which can modulate DNA methylation and other epigenetic modifiers that regulate both the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes.