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Publication : Nuclear genetic control of mitochondrial DNA segregation.

First Author  Battersby BJ Year  2003
Journal  Nat Genet Volume  33
Issue  2 Pages  183-6
PubMed ID  12539044 Mgi Jnum  J:81446
Mgi Id  MGI:2449363 Doi  10.1038/ng1073
Citation  Battersby BJ, et al. (2003) Nuclear genetic control of mitochondrial DNA segregation. Nat Genet 33(2):183-6
abstractText  Mammalian mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is a high copy-number, maternally inherited genome that codes for a small number of essential proteins involved in oxidative phosphorylation. Mutations in mtDNA are responsible for a broad spectrum of clinical disorders. The segregation pattern of pathogenic mtDNA mutants is an important determinant of the nature and severity of mitochondrial disease, but it varies with the specific mutation, cell type and nuclear background and generally does not correlate well with mitochondrial dysfunction. To identify nuclear genes that modify the segregation behavior of mtDNA, we used a heteroplasmic mouse model derived from two inbred strains (BALB/c and NZB; ref. 12), in which we had previously demonstrated tissue-specific and age-dependent directional selection for different mtDNA genotypes in the same mouse. Here we show that this phenotype segregates in F2 mice from a genetic cross (BALB/c x CAST/Ei) and that it maps to at least three quantitative-trait loci (QTLs). Genome-wide scans showed linkage of the trait to loci on Chromosomes 2, 5 and 6, accounting for 16-35% of the variance in the trait, depending on the tissue and age of the mouse. This is the first genetic evidence for nuclear control of mammalian mtDNA segregation.
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