Identification and characterisation of mitochondrial sequences integrated into the ovine nuclear genome.
Féménia. M M; Charles. M M; Boulling. A A; Rocha. D D
Key Findings
- ~390 NUMT regions covering ~720 kb (0.02% of the sheep genome) were identified
- Most NUMTs are intergenic or intronic and not transcribed
- Some NUMTs may encode novel nuclear humanin isoforms
- PCR validation confirmed nine NUMT regions, highlighting the need for careful primer design
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the study mainly warns that mitochondrial DNA tests can be confounded by nuclear copies, so primer design must avoid NUMTs. It doesn’t provide new dosing or usage guidance for humanin in humans, but highlights the complexity of humanin’s genetic origins.
Summary
Scientists mapped pieces of mitochondrial DNA that have moved into the sheep’s nuclear DNA, finding about 390 such regions. Most of these are in non‑coding parts of the genome and aren’t active, but a few might code for new versions of the peptide humanin. They also showed that these nuclear copies can mess up DNA tests if you’re not careful with primer design.
Abstract
Mitochondrial DNA sequences are frequently transferred into the nuclear genome, generating nuclear mitochondrial DNA sequences (NUMTs). Here, we analysed, for the first time, NUMTs in the ovine genome. We obtained 760 alignment matches covering 513.8 kbp of the sheep nuclear genome. After a merging step, we identified 390 NUMT regions with a total length of ~720 kbp, representing 0.02% of the nuclear genome. We discovered copies of all mitochondrial regions and found that most NUMT regions are intergenic or intronic. Ovine NUMTs are mostly not transcribed. However, we identified within some of the NUMTs, potential new genes encoding nuclear humanin isoforms. To rule out the possibility that the identified NUMTs could be artifacts of the Oar Rambouillet v1.0 genome assembly, we validated experimentally nine NUMT regions by PCR amplification. As we found several NUMT regions showing high similarity to the mitochondrial genome that potentially could pose a risk to ovine DNA mitochondrial studies, special care must be taken for the selection of primers for PCR amplification of mitochondrial DNA sequences.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-05-31T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/age.13096
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