Genetic Control over mtDNA and Its Relationship to Major Depressive Disorder

Na Cai(Centre for Human Genetics), Yihan Li(University of Oxford), Simon Chang(Chang Gung University), Jieqin Liang(BGI Group (China)), Chongyun Lin(BGI Group (China)), Xiufei Zhang(BGI Group (China)), Liang Lu(BGI Group (China)), Jingchu Hu(BGI Group (China)), Wharton O. Y. Chan(Centre for Human Genetics), Kenneth S. Kendler(Virginia Commonwealth University), Tomas Malinauskas(Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Guo‐Jen Huang(Chang Gung University), Qibin Li(BGI Group (China)), Richard Mott(University of Oxford), Jonathan Flint(Centre for Human Genetics)
Current Biology
December 1, 2015
Cited by 123Open Access
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Abstract

Control over the number of mtDNA molecules per cell appears to be tightly regulated, but the mechanisms involved are largely unknown. Reversible alterations in the amount of mtDNA occur in response to stress suggesting that control over the amount of mtDNA is involved in stress-related diseases including major depressive disorder (MDD). Using low-coverage sequence data from 10,442 Chinese women to compute the normalized numbers of reads mapping to the mitochondrial genome as a proxy for the amount of mtDNA, we identified two loci that contribute to mtDNA levels: one within the TFAM gene on chromosome 10 (rs11006126, p value = 8.73 × 10(-28), variance explained = 1.90%) and one over the CDK6 gene on chromosome 7 (rs445, p value = 6.03 × 10(-16), variance explained = 0.50%). Both loci replicated in an independent cohort. CDK6 is thus a new molecule involved in the control of mtDNA. We identify increased rates of heteroplasmy in women with MDD, and show from an experimental paradigm using mice that the increase is likely due to stress. Furthermore, at least one heteroplasmic variant is significantly associated with changes in the amount of mtDNA (position 513, p value = 3.27 × 10(-9), variance explained = 0.48%) suggesting site-specific heteroplasmy as a possible link between stress and increase in amount of mtDNA. These findings indicate the involvement of mitochondrial genome copy number and sequence in an organism's response to stress.


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