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Presence and Transmission of Mitochondrial Heteroplasmic Mutations in Human Populations of European and African Ancestry

Authors :
Brian E. Cade
Adolfo Correa
Leslie A. Lange
Thomas W. Blackwell
Chunyu Liu
Jessica L. Fetterman
James F. Wilson
Yong Qian
Kaiyu Yan
Pramod Anugu
Achilleas N. Pitsillides
Gonçalo R. Abecasis
Daniel Levy
Xianbang Sun
Jun Ding
Laura M. Raffield
Heming Wang
Ramachandran S. Vasan
Susan Redline
L. Adrienne Cupples
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

We investigated the concordance of mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmic mutations (heteroplasmies) in different types of maternal pairs (n=6,745 pairs) of European (EA, n=4,718 pairs) and African (AA, n=2,027 pairs) Americans with whole genome sequences (WGSs). The average concordance rate of heteroplasmies was highest between mother-offspring pairs, followed by sibling-sibling pairs and more distantly related maternal pairs in both EA and AA participants. The allele fractions of concordant heteroplasmies exhibited high correlation (R2=0.8) between paired individuals. Compared to concordant heteroplasmies, discordant ones were more likely to locate in coding regions, be nonsynonymous or nonsynonymous-deleterious (p0.05) at 11p11.12. Many of the top SNPs act as strong long-range cis regulators of protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor type J. This study provides further evidence that mtDNA heteroplasmies may be inherited or somatic. Somatic heteroplasmic variants increase with advancing age and are more likely to have an adverse impact on mitochondrial function. Further studies are warranted for functional characterization of the deleterious heteroplasmies occurring with advancing age and the association of the 11p11.12 region of the nuclear genome with mtDNA heteroplasmy.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2d2ad5a1f07a2827b2c1dd179c668c8a