Heteroplasmic segregation associated with trisomy-9 in cultured human cells.

1999 
In cybrid cells carrying the mitochondrial A3243G MELAS mutation, which were also heteroplasmic for the G12300A suppressor mutation, we observed a transient episode of heteroplasmic instability, resulting in a wide diversification in G12300A heteroplasmy levels and a shift in the average heteroplasmy level from 11 to 29%. These cells were found to be trisomic for chromosome 9, whereas a minority of cells that retained disomy-9 showed no instability. Coculture experiments implied that trisomy-9 cells exhibited a significant growth advantage, but neither heteroplasmy levels, respiratory phenotype nor trisomy-9 itself had direct selective value under standard culture conditions. Mitochondrial nucleoid number was the same (50–100) in cells that had or had not experienced transient heteroplasmic instability, but 1–2 orders of magnitude less than the segregation number in such cells. These findings support the idea that mtDNA partition is under nuclear genetic control, and implicate a locus on chromosome 9 in this regulation.
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