4.8 Article

Accelerated expansion of pathogenic mitochondrial DNA heteroplasmies in Huntington's disease

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2014610118

Keywords

mitochondrial DNA; Huntington's disease; sequencing

Funding

  1. CHDI Foundation
  2. European Huntington's Disease Network
  3. CHDI

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Mitochondrial dysfunction is accelerated in patients with Huntington's disease due to the presence of pathogenic mtDNA heteroplasmies, particularly in lymphoblasts. The expansion of these heteroplasmies is correlated with disease progression and severity, as well as decline in functional capacity. Additionally, elongated CAG repeats in the HTT gene contribute to the age-dependent expansion of pathogenic mtDNA heteroplasmies in HD patients.
Mitochondrial dysfunction is found in the brain and peripheral tissues of patients diagnosed with Huntington's disease (HD), an irreversible neurodegenerative disease of which aging is a major risk factor. Mitochondrial function is encoded by not only nuclear DNA but also DNA within mitochondria (mtDNA). Expansion of mtDNA heteroplasmies (coexistence of mutated and wild-type mtDNA) can contribute to age-related decline of mitochondrial function but has not been systematically investigated in HD. Here, by using a sensitive mtDNA-targeted sequencing method, we studied mtDNA heteroplasmies in lymphoblasts and longitudinal blood samples of HD patients. We found a significant increase in the fraction of mtDNA heteroplasmies with predicted pathogenicity in lymphoblasts from 1,549 HD patients relative to lymphoblasts from 182 healthy individuals. The increased fraction of pathogenic mtDNA heteroplasmies in HD lymphoblasts also correlated with advancing HD stages and worsened disease severity measured by HD motor function, cognitive function, and functional capacity. Of note, elongated CAG repeats in HTT promoted age-dependent expansion of pathogenic mtDNA heteroplasmies in HD lymphoblasts. We then confirmed in longitudinal blood samples of 169 HD patients that expansion of pathogenic mtDNA heteroplasmies was correlated with decline in functional capacity and exacerbation of HD motor and cognitive functions during a median follow-up of 6 y. The results of our study indicate accelerated decline of mtDNA quality in HD, and highlight monitoring mtDNA heteroplasmies longitudinally as a way to investigate the progressive decline of mitochondrial function in aging and age-related diseases.

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