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GWAS Study

Nuclear genetic control of mtDNA copy number and heteroplasmy in humans.

Gupta R, Kanai M, Durham TJ et al.

37587338 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
1874 Participants
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GR
Gupta R
KM
Kanai M
DT
Durham TJ
TK
Tsuo K
MJ
McCoy JG
KA
Kotrys AV
ZW
Zhou W
CP
Chinnery PF
KK
Karczewski KJ
CS
Calvo SE
NB
Neale BM
MV
Mootha VK
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is a maternally inherited, high-copy-number genome required for oxidative phosphorylation1. Heteroplasmy refers to the presence of a mixture of mtDNA alleles in an individual and has been associated with disease and ageing. Mechanisms underlying common variation in human heteroplasmy, and the influence of the nuclear genome on this variation, remain insufficiently explored. Here we quantify mtDNA copy number (mtCN) and heteroplasmy using blood-derived whole-genome sequences from 274,832 individuals and perform genome-wide association studies to identify associated nuclear loci. Following blood cell composition correction, we find that mtCN declines linearly with age and is associated with variants at 92 nuclear loci. We observe that nearly everyone harbours heteroplasmic mtDNA variants obeying two principles: (1) heteroplasmic single nucleotide variants tend to arise somatically and accumulate sharply after the age of 70 years, whereas (2) heteroplasmic indels are maternally inherited as mixtures with relative levels associated with 42 nuclear loci involved in mtDNA replication, maintenance and novel pathways. These loci may act by conferring a replicative advantage to certain mtDNA alleles. As an illustrative example, we identify a length variant carried by more than 50% of humans at position chrM:302 within a G-quadruplex previously proposed to mediate mtDNA transcription/replication switching2,3. We find that this variant exerts cis-acting genetic control over mtDNA abundance and is itself associated in-trans with nuclear loci encoding machinery for this regulatory switch. Our study suggests that common variation in the nuclear genome can shape variation in mtCN and heteroplasmy dynamics across the human population.

1,687 European ancestry individuals, 83 Central Asian ancestry individuals, 104 East Asian ancestry individuals

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

1874
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
European, Central Asian, East Asian, African American or Afro-Caribbean, Hispanic or Latin American, Greater Middle Eastern (Middle Eastern, North African or Persian)
Ancestry
U.K., U.S.
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

Analysis

Comprehensive review of health and genetic findings

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