4.8 Article

High-frequency and functional mitochondrial DNA mutations at the single-cell level

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2201518120

Keywords

aging; single cell; mitochondrial DNA

Funding

  1. NIH [R01GM117190A1]

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Research suggests that decline in mitochondrial function is a key factor in aging and age-related diseases, and the role of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations in these processes is not fully understood. A cost-effective mtDNA sequencing protocol called scSTAMP was developed to investigate patterns of mtDNA mutations at the single-cell level. Results from single-cell sequencing of B lymphocytes and monocytes from an elderly female showed that over 50% of cells carried at least one mtDNA mutation, with a high prevalence of mutations with functional significance.
Decline in mitochondrial function underlies aging and age-related diseases, but the role of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations in these processes remains elusive. To investigate patterns of mtDNA mutations, it is particularly important to quantify mtDNA mutations and their associated pathogenic effects at the single-cell level. However, existing single-cell mtDNA sequencing approaches remain inefficient due to high cost and low mtDNA on-target rates. In this study, we developed a cost-effective mtDNA targeted-sequencing protocol called single-cell sequencing by targeted amplification of multiplex probes (scSTAMP) and experimentally validated its reliability. We then applied our method to assess single-cell mtDNA mutations in 768 B lymphocytes and 768 monocytes from a 76-y-old female. Across 632 B lymphocyte and 617 monocytes with medium mtDNA coverage over >100x, our results indicated that over 50% of cells carried at least one mtDNA mutation with variant allele frequencies (VAFs) over 20%, and that cells carried an average of 0.658 and 0.712 such mutation for B lymphocytes and monocytes, respectively. Surprisingly, more than 20% of the observed mutations had VAFs of over 90% in either cell population. In addition, over 60% of the mutations were in protein-coding genes, of which over 70% were nonsynonymous, and more than 50% of the nonsynonymous mutations were predicted to be highly pathogenic. Interestingly, about 80% of the observed mutations were singletons in the respective cell populations. Our results revealed mtDNA mutations with functional significance might be prevalent at advanced age, calling further investigation on age-related mtDNA mutation dynamics at the single-cell level.

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