Abstract
Skeletal muscle-mass loss with age has severe health consequences, yet the molecular basis of the loss remains obscure. Although mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)-deletion mutations have been shown to accumulate with age, for these aberrant genomes to be physiologically relevant, they must accumulate to high levels intracellularly and be present in a significant number of cells. We examined mtDNA-deletion mutations in vastus lateralis (VL) muscle of human subjects aged 49-93 years, using both histologic and polymerase-chain-reaction (PCR) analyses, to determine the physiological and genomic integrity of mitochondria in aging human muscle. The number of VL muscle fibers exhibiting mitochondrial electron-transport-system (ETS) abnormalities increased from an estimated 6% at age 49 years to 31% at age 92 years. We analyzed the mitochondrial genotype of 48 single ETS-abnormal, cytochrome c oxidase-negative/succinate dehydrogenase-hyperreactive (COX-/SDH ++) fibers from normal aging human subjects and identified mtDNA-deletion mutations in all abnormal fibers. Deletion mutations were clonal within a fiber and concomitant to the COX-/SDH++ region. Quantitative PCR analysis of wild-type and deletion-containing mtDNA genomes within ETS-abnormal regions of single fibers demonstrated that these deletion mutations accumulate to detrimental levels (>90% of the total mtDNA). © 2006 by The American Society of Human Genetics. All rights reserved.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Bua, E., Johnson, J., Herbst, A., Delong, B., McKenzie, D., Salamat, S., & Aiken, J. M. (2006). Mitochondrial DNA-deletion mutations accumulate intracellularly to detrimental levels in aged human skeletal muscle fibers. American Journal of Human Genetics, 79(3), 469–480. https://doi.org/10.1086/507132
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.