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Dynamics of mitochondrial heteroplasmy in three families investigated via a repeatable re-sequencing study (CROSBI ID 192664)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Goto, Hiroki ; Dickins, Benjamin ; Afgan, Enis ; Paul, Ian M ; Taylor, James ; Makova, Kateryna D ; Nekrutenko, Anton Dynamics of mitochondrial heteroplasmy in three families investigated via a repeatable re-sequencing study // Genome biology, 12 (2011), R59-R59. doi: 10.1186/gb-2011-12-6-r59

Podaci o odgovornosti

Goto, Hiroki ; Dickins, Benjamin ; Afgan, Enis ; Paul, Ian M ; Taylor, James ; Makova, Kateryna D ; Nekrutenko, Anton

engleski

Dynamics of mitochondrial heteroplasmy in three families investigated via a repeatable re-sequencing study

Background Originally believed to be a rare phenomenon, heteroplasmy - the presence of more than one mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variant within a cell, tissue, or individual - is emerging as an important component of eukaryotic genetic diversity. Heteroplasmies can be used as genetic markers in applications ranging from forensics to cancer diagnostics. Yet the frequency of heteroplasmic alleles may vary from generation to generation due to the bottleneck occurring during oogenesis. Therefore, to understand the alterations in allele frequencies at heteroplasmic sites, it is of critical importance to investigate the dynamics of maternal mtDNA transmission. Results Here we sequenced, at high coverage, mtDNA from blood and buccal tissues of nine individuals from three families with a total of six maternal transmission events. Using simulations and re- sequencing of clonal DNA, we devised a set of criteria for detecting polymorphic sites in heterogeneous genetic samples that is resistant to the noise originating from massively parallel sequencing technologies. Application of these criteria to nine human mtDNA samples revealed four heteroplasmic sites. Conclusions Our results suggest that the incidence of heteroplasmy may be lower than estimated in some other recent re-sequencing studies, and that mtDNA allelic frequencies differ significantly both between tissues of the same individual and between a mother and her offspring. We designed our study in such a way that the complete analysis described here can be repeated by anyone either at our site or directly on the Amazon Cloud. Our computational pipeline can be easily modified to accommodate other applications, such as viral re-sequencing.

Mitochondrial heteroplasmy; Reproducibility

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Podaci o izdanju

12

2011.

R59-R59

objavljeno

1474-760X

10.1186/gb-2011-12-6-r59

Povezanost rada

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Računarstvo, Biologija

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