Mitochondrial Network State Scales mtDNA Genetic Dynamics
Juvid Aryaman, Charlotte Bowles, Nick S. Jones and Iain G. Johnston
Genetics Early online July 10, 2019; https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.119.302423
Juvid Aryaman, Charlotte Bowles, Nick S. Jones and Iain G. Johnston
Genetics Early online July 10, 2019; https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.119.302423
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) populations within our cells encode vital
energetic machinery. MtDNA is housed within mitochondria, cellular
compartments lined by two membranes, that lead a very dynamic life.
Individual mitochondria can fuse when they meet, and fused
mitochondria can fragment to become individual smaller mitochondria,
all the while moving throughout the cell. The reasons for this
dynamic activity remain unclear (we’ve compared hypotheses about
them before here and here, with blog articles here). But what influence do these physical
mitochondrial dynamics have on the genetic composition of mtDNA
populations?
MtDNA populations can, naturally or as a result of gene therapies,
consist of a mixture of different mtDNA types. Typically, different
cells will have different proportions of, say, type A and type B. For
example, one cell may be 20% type A, another cell may be 40% type A,
and a third may be 70% type A. This variability matters because when
a certain threshold (often around 60%) is crossed for some mtDNA
types, we get devastating diseases.
We
previously showed mathematically (blog) and experimentally (blog) that this
cell-to-cell variability in mtDNA proportions (often
called “heteroplasmy variance” and sometimes referred to via the
“mtDNA bottleneck”) is
expected to increase linearly over time. However,
this analysis pictured mtDNAs as individual molecules, outside of
their mitochondrial compartments. When mitochondria fuse to form
larger compartments, their mtDNA is more protected: smaller
mitochondria (and their internal mtDNA) are subject to greater
degradation. More degradation means more replication, and more
opportunities for the fraction of a particular type of mtDNA to
change per unit time. In a new
paper here in Genetics, we show (using a mathematical tour de force by
Juvid) that this protection can dramatically influence cell-to-cell
mtDNA variability. Specifically, the rate of heteroplasmy variance
increase is scaled by the proportion of mitochondria that exist in a
fragmented state. (It turns out that it's the proportion of
itochondria that are fragmented that's important -- not whether the
rate of fission-fusion is fast or slow).
This
has knock-on effects for how the cell can best get rid of low-quality
mutant mtDNA. In particular, if mitochondria are allowed to fuse
based on their quality (“selective fusion”), we show that
intermediate rates of fusion are best for removing mutants. Too much
fusion, and all mtDNA is protected; too little, and good mtDNA
cannot be sorted from bad mtDNA using the mitochondrial network.
This mechanism could help explain why we see different levels of
mitochondrial fusion in different conditions. More broadly, this link
between mitochondrial physics and genetics (which we’ve also
speculated about here (blog) and here) suggests one way that selective
pressures and tradeoffs could influence mitochondrial dynamics,
giving rise to the wide variety of behaviours that remain
unexplained. Juvid, Nick,
and Iain
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