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  4. Secondary structure of the human mitochondrial genome affects formation of deletions
 
research article

Secondary structure of the human mitochondrial genome affects formation of deletions

Shamanskiy, Victor
•
Mikhailova, Alina A.
•
Tretiakov, Evgenii O.
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May 8, 2023
Bmc Biology

BackgroundAging in postmitotic tissues is associated with clonal expansion of somatic mitochondrial deletions, the origin of which is not well understood. Such deletions are often flanked by direct nucleotide repeats, but this alone does not fully explain their distribution. Here, we hypothesized that the close proximity of direct repeats on single-stranded mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) might play a role in the formation of deletions.ResultsBy analyzing human mtDNA deletions in the major arc of mtDNA, which is single-stranded during replication and is characterized by a high number of deletions, we found a non-uniform distribution with a "hot spot" where one deletion breakpoint occurred within the region of 6-9 kb and another within 13-16 kb of the mtDNA. This distribution was not explained by the presence of direct repeats, suggesting that other factors, such as the spatial proximity of these two regions, can be the cause. In silico analyses revealed that the single-stranded major arc may be organized as a large-scale hairpin-like loop with a center close to 11 kb and contacting regions between 6-9 kb and 13-16 kb, which would explain the high deletion activity in this contact zone. The direct repeats located within the contact zone, such as the well-known common repeat with a first arm at 8470-8482 bp (base pair) and a second arm at 13,447-13,459 bp, are three times more likely to cause deletions compared to direct repeats located outside of the contact zone. A comparison of age- and disease-associated deletions demonstrated that the contact zone plays a crucial role in explaining the age-associated deletions, emphasizing its importance in the rate of healthy aging.ConclusionsOverall, we provide topological insights into the mechanism of age-associated deletion formation in human mtDNA, which could be used to predict somatic deletion burden and maximum lifespan in different human haplogroups and mammalian species.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1186/s12915-023-01606-1
Web of Science ID

WOS:000983079000002

Author(s)
Shamanskiy, Victor
Mikhailova, Alina A.
Tretiakov, Evgenii O.
Ushakova, Kristina
Mikhailova, Alina G.
Oreshkov, Sergei
Knorre, Dmitry A.
Ree, Natalia
Overdevest, Jonathan B.
Lukowski, Samuel W.
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Date Issued

2023-05-08

Publisher

BMC

Published in
Bmc Biology
Volume

21

Issue

1

Start page

103

Subjects

Biology

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Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics

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mitochondrial dna

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deletions

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aging

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single-stranded dna

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global secondary structure

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contact zone

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direct repeats

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inverted repeats

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mtdna replication

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dna deletions

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clonal expansion

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human oocytes

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life-span

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mutations

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accumulation

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organization

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sequence

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system

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPFELLAY  
Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/198500
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