Mitochondrial DNA Mutations, Pathogenicity and Inheritance

author

Abstract:

Mitochondria contain their own DNA (mtDNA), which codes for 13 proteins (all subunits of the respiratory chain complexes), 22 tRNAs and 2 rRNAs. Several mtDNA point mutations as well as deletions have been shown to be causative in well-defined mitochondrial disorders. A mixture of mutated and wild type mtDNA (heteroplasmy) is found in most of these disorders. Inheritance of mtDNA is maternal, and mothers with heteroplasmic mtDNA transmit different proportions of normal and mutated mtDNA to the children.Mitochondrial tRNA genes have a central role in mitochondrial gene expression at the level of transcription,RNA processing and protein synthesis and they appear to be the mitochondrial genes most frequentlyaffected by mutations causing diseases in man.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Mitochondrial DNA analysis: polymorphisms and pathogenicity.

The investigation of mtDNA disease can be relatively straightforward if a person has a recognisable phenotype and if it is possible to identify a known pathogenic mtDNA mutation. The difficulties arise when no known mtDNA defect can be found, or when the clinical abnormalities are complex and not easily matched to those of the more common mitochondrial disorders. We will describe here the diffi...

full text

Mitochondrial DNA Mutations in Cancer

Mitochondrial defects have been associated with severe neurodegenerative disorders [2], and, more recently, with primary hereditary neoplasias. Germline heterozygote mutations in the nucleus-encoded mitochondrial succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) subunits—a tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) enzyme, which is also part of the respiratory chain—cause inherited pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas. Mutati...

full text

The pathogenicity scoring system for mitochondrial tRNA mutations revisited

Confirming the pathogenicity of mitochondrial tRNA point mutations is one of the classical challenges in the field of mitochondrial medicine. In addition to genetic and functional studies, the evaluation of a genetic change using a pathogenicity scoring system is extremely useful to discriminate between disease-causing mutations from neutral polymorphisms. The pathogenicity scoring system is ve...

full text

Review article Mitochondrial DNA analysis: polymorphisms and pathogenicity

The investigation of mtDNA disease can be relatively straightforward if a person has a recognisable phenotype and if it is possible to identify a known pathogenic mtDNA mutation. The diYculties arise when no known mtDNA defect can be found, or when the clinical abnormalities are complex and not easily matched to those of the more common mitochondrial disorders. We will describe here the diYcult...

full text

Natural radioactivity and human mitochondrial DNA mutations.

Radioactivity is known to induce tumors, chromosome lesions, and minisatellite length mutations, but its effects on the DNA sequence have not previously been studied. A coastal peninsula in Kerala (India) contains the world's highest level of natural radioactivity in a densely populated area, offering an opportunity to characterize radiation-associated DNA mutations. We sampled 248 pedigrees (9...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 1  issue 1

pages  1- 18

publication date 2003-01-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023