Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations are a common cause of human disease and accumulate as part of normal ageing and in common neurodegenerative disorders. Cells express a biochemical defect only when the proportion of mutated mtDNA exceeds a critical threshold, but it is not clear whether the actual cause of this defect is a loss of wild-type mtDNA, an excess of mutated mtDNA, or a combination of the two. Here, we show that segments of human skeletal muscle fibers harboring two pathogenic mtDNA mutations retain normal cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activity by maintaining a minimum amount of wild-type mtDNA. For these mutations, direct measurements of mutated and wild-type mtDNA molecules within the same skeletal muscle fiber are consistent with the "maintenance of wild type" hypothesis, which predicts that there is nonselective proliferation of mutated and wild-type mtDNA in response to the molecular defect. However, for the m.3243A→G mutation, a superabundance of wild-type mtDNA was found in many muscle-fiber sections with negligible COX activity, indicating that the pathogenic mechanism for this particular mutation involves interference with the function of the wild-type mtDNA or wild-type gene products. © 2007 by The American Society of Human Genetics. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Durham, S. E., Samuels, D. C., Cree, L. M., & Chinnery, P. F. (2007). Normal levels of wild-type mitochondrial DNA maintain cytochrome c oxidase activity for two pathogenic mitochondrial DNA mutations but not for m.3243A→G. American Journal of Human Genetics, 81(1), 189–195. https://doi.org/10.1086/518901
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