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Cancer-specific SNPs originate from low-level heteroplasmic variants in human mitochondrial genomes of a matched cell line pair

Authors :
Steinar Johansen
Erik Knutsen
Tor Erik Jørgensen
Maria Perander
Annica Hedberg
Anne Silje Løvhaugen
Source :
Mitochondrial DNA. Part A, DNA mapping, sequencing, and analysis. 30(1)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Low-level mitochondrial heteroplasmy is a common phenomenon in both normal and cancer cells. Here, we investigate the link between low-level heteroplasmy and mitogenome mutations in a human breast cancer matched cell line by high-throughput sequencing. We identified 23 heteroplasmic sites, of which 15 were common between normal cells (Hs578Bst) and cancer cells (Hs578T). Most sites were clustered within the highly conserved Complex IV and ribosomal RNA genes. Two heteroplasmic variants in normal cells were found as fixed mutations in cancer cells. This indicates a positive selection of these variants in cancer cells. RNA-Seq analysis identified upregulated L-strand specific transcripts in cancer cells, which include three mitochondrial long non-coding RNA molecules. We hypothesize that this is due to two cancer cell-specific mutations in the control region.

Details

ISSN :
24701408
Volume :
30
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Mitochondrial DNA. Part A, DNA mapping, sequencing, and analysis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....efe27988557cdd6878e83f6f8bfa3179