Abstract
The genetic information in mammalian mitochondrial DNA is densely packed; there are no introns and only one sizeable noncoding, or control, region containing key cis-elements for its replication and expression. Many molecules of mitochondrial DNA bear a third strand of DNA, known as "7S DNA," which forms a displacement (D-) loop in the control region. Here we show that many other molecules contain RNA as a third strand. The RNA of these R-loops maps to the control region of the mitochondrial DNA and is complementary to 7S DNA. Ribonuclease H1 is essential for mitochondrial DNA replication; it degrades RNA hybridized to DNA, so the R-loop is a potential substrate. In cells with a pathological variant of ribonuclease H1 associated with mitochondrial disease, R-loops are of low abundance, and there is mitochondrial DNA aggregation. These findings implicate ribonuclease H1 and RNA in the physical segregation of mitochondrial DNA, perturbation of which represents a previously unidentified disease mechanism.
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Akman, G., Desai, R., Bailey, L. J., Yasukawa, T., Rosa, I. D., Durigon, R., … Holt, I. J. (2016). Pathological ribonuclease H1 causes R-loop depletion and aberrant DNA segregation in mitochondria. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(30), E4276–E4285. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1600537113
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