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1.
Development ; 151(20)2024 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38980277

ABSTRACT

Many animals share a lifelong capacity to adapt their growth rates and body sizes to changing environmental food supplies. However, the cellular and molecular basis underlying this plasticity remains only poorly understood. We therefore studied how the sea anemones Nematostella vectensis and Aiptasia (Exaiptasia pallida) respond to feeding and starvation. Combining quantifications of body size and cell numbers with mathematical modelling, we observed that growth and shrinkage rates in Nematostella are exponential, stereotypic and accompanied by dramatic changes in cell numbers. Notably, shrinkage rates, but not growth rates, are independent of body size. In the facultatively symbiotic Aiptasia, we show that growth and cell proliferation rates are dependent on the symbiotic state. On a cellular level, we found that >7% of all cells in Nematostella juveniles reversibly shift between S/G2/M and G1/G0 cell cycle phases when fed or starved, respectively. Furthermore, we demonstrate that polyp growth and cell proliferation are dependent on TOR signalling during feeding. Altogether, we provide a benchmark and resource for further investigating the nutritional regulation of body plasticity on multiple scales using the genetic toolkit available for Nematostella.


Subject(s)
Body Size , Cell Proliferation , Sea Anemones , Animals , Sea Anemones/cytology , Sea Anemones/physiology , Cell Cycle/physiology , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Signal Transduction , Symbiosis , TOR Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism
2.
Semin Cell Dev Biol ; 156: 253-265, 2024 03 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38043948

ABSTRACT

Mitochondria play diverse and essential roles in eukaryotic cells, and plants are no exception. Plant mitochondria have several differences from their metazoan and fungal cousins: they often exist in a fragmented state, move rapidly on actin rather than microtubules, have many plant-specific metabolic features and roles, and usually contain only a subset of the complete mtDNA genome, which itself undergoes frequent recombination. This arrangement means that exchange and complementation is essential for plant mitochondria, and recent work has begun to reveal how their collective dynamics and resultant "social networks" of encounters support this exchange, connecting plant mitochondria in time rather than in space. This review will argue that this social network perspective can be extended to a "societal network", where mitochondrial dynamics are an essential part of the interacting cellular society of organelles and biomolecules. Evidence is emerging that mitochondrial dynamics allow optimal resolutions to competing cellular priorities; we will survey this evidence and review potential future research directions, highlighting that plant mitochondria can help reveal and test principles that apply across other kingdoms of life. In parallel with this fundamental cell biology, we also highlight the translational "One Health" importance of plant mitochondrial behaviour - which is exploited in the production of a vast amount of crops consumed worldwide - and the potential for multi-objective optimisation to understand and rationally re-engineer the evolved resolutions to these tensions.


Subject(s)
Mitochondria , Mitochondrial Dynamics , Animals , Mitochondria/metabolism , Plants/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/metabolism , Organelles/metabolism
3.
Mol Biol Evol ; 41(6)2024 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38758976

ABSTRACT

Mitochondria and plastids have both dramatically reduced their genomes since the endosymbiotic events that created them. The similarities and differences in the evolution of the two organelle genome types have been the target of discussion and investigation for decades. Ongoing work has suggested that similar mechanisms may modulate the reductive evolution of the two organelles in a given species, but quantitative data and statistical analyses exploring this picture remain limited outside of some specific cases like parasitism. Here, we use cross-eukaryote organelle genome data to explore evidence for coevolution of mitochondrial and plastid genome reduction. Controlling for differences between clades and pseudoreplication due to relatedness, we find that extents of mtDNA and ptDNA gene retention are related to each other across taxa, in a generally positive correlation that appears to differ quantitatively across eukaryotes, for example, between algal and nonalgal species. We find limited evidence for coevolution of specific mtDNA and ptDNA gene pairs, suggesting that the similarities between the two organelle types may be due mainly to independent responses to consistent evolutionary drivers.


Subject(s)
Genome, Mitochondrial , Genome, Plastid , Plastids , Plastids/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Mitochondria/genetics , Species Specificity , Biological Evolution , Eukaryota/genetics
4.
Syst Biol ; 73(2): 419-433, 2024 Jul 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38459872

ABSTRACT

Comparative analysis of variables across phylogenetically linked observations can reveal mechanisms and insights in evolutionary biology. As the taxonomic breadth of the sample of interest increases, challenges of data sparsity, poor phylogenetic resolution, and complicated evolutionary dynamics emerge. Here, we investigate a cross-eukaryotic question where all these problems exist: which organismal ecology features are correlated with gene retention in mitochondrial and chloroplast DNA (organelle DNA or oDNA). Through a wide palette of synthetic control studies, we first characterize the specificity and sensitivity of a collection of parametric and non-parametric phylogenetic comparative approaches to identify relationships in the face of such sparse and awkward datasets. This analysis is not directly focused on oDNA, and so provides generalizable insights into comparative approaches with challenging data. We then combine and curate ecological data coupled to oDNA genome information across eukaryotes, including a new semi-automated approach for gathering data on organismal traits from less systematized open-access resources including encyclopedia articles on species and taxa. The curation process also involved resolving several issues with existing datasets, including enforcing the clade-specificity of several ecological features and fixing incorrect annotations. Combining this unique dataset with our benchmarked comparative approaches, we confirm support for several known links between organismal ecology and organelle gene retention, identify several previously unidentified relationships constituting possible ecological contributors to oDNA genome evolution, and provide support for a recently hypothesized link between environmental demand and oDNA retention. We, with caution, discuss the implications of these findings for organelle evolution and of this pipeline for broad comparative analyses in other fields.


Subject(s)
Classification , Eukaryota , Phylogeny , Eukaryota/genetics , Eukaryota/classification , Classification/methods , Evolution, Molecular
5.
Biochem J ; 481(15): 1015-1042, 2024 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39101615

ABSTRACT

Across eukaryotes, most genes required for mitochondrial function have been transferred to, or otherwise acquired by, the nucleus. Encoding genes in the nucleus has many advantages. So why do mitochondria retain any genes at all? Why does the set of mtDNA genes vary so much across different species? And how do species maintain functionality in the mtDNA genes they do retain? In this review, we will discuss some possible answers to these questions, attempting a broad perspective across eukaryotes. We hope to cover some interesting features which may be less familiar from the perspective of particular species, including the ubiquity of recombination outside bilaterian animals, encrypted chainmail-like mtDNA, single genes split over multiple mtDNA chromosomes, triparental inheritance, gene transfer by grafting, gain of mtDNA recombination factors, social networks of mitochondria, and the role of mtDNA dysfunction in feeding the world. We will discuss a unifying picture where organismal ecology and gene-specific features together influence whether organism X retains mtDNA gene Y, and where ecology and development together determine which strategies, importantly including recombination, are used to maintain the mtDNA genes that are retained.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial , Evolution, Molecular , Animals , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/metabolism , Eukaryota/genetics , Humans , Recombination, Genetic , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondria/metabolism , Genes, Mitochondrial
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(34): e2206973119, 2022 08 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35969753

ABSTRACT

The fate of new mitochondrial and plastid mutations depends on their ability to persist and spread among the numerous organellar genome copies within a cell (heteroplasmy). The extent to which heteroplasmies are transmitted across generations or eliminated through genetic bottlenecks is not well understood in plants, in part because their low mutation rates make these variants so infrequent. Disruption of MutS Homolog 1 (MSH1), a gene involved in plant organellar DNA repair, results in numerous de novo point mutations, which we used to quantitatively track the inheritance of single nucleotide variants in mitochondrial and plastid genomes in Arabidopsis. We found that heteroplasmic sorting (the fixation or loss of a variant) was rapid for both organelles, greatly exceeding rates observed in animals. In msh1 mutants, plastid variants sorted faster than those in mitochondria and were typically fixed or lost within a single generation. Effective transmission bottleneck sizes (N) for plastids and mitochondria were N ∼ 1 and 4, respectively. Restoring MSH1 function further increased the rate of heteroplasmic sorting in mitochondria (N ∼ 1.3), potentially because of its hypothesized role in promoting gene conversion as a mechanism of DNA repair, which is expected to homogenize genome copies within a cell. Heteroplasmic sorting also favored GC base pairs. Therefore, recombinational repair and gene conversion in plant organellar genomes can potentially accelerate the elimination of heteroplasmies and bias the outcome of this sorting process.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Arabidopsis , Heteroplasmy , MutS DNA Mismatch-Binding Protein , Arabidopsis/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Plant/genetics , Genome, Plant , Mitochondria/genetics , MutS DNA Mismatch-Binding Protein/metabolism , Plastids/genetics , Plastids/metabolism
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(11): e2113883119, 2022 03 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35275794

ABSTRACT

SignificanceWhy does evolution favor symmetric structures when they only represent a minute subset of all possible forms? Just as monkeys randomly typing into a computer language will preferentially produce outputs that can be generated by shorter algorithms, so the coding theorem from algorithmic information theory predicts that random mutations, when decoded by the process of development, preferentially produce phenotypes with shorter algorithmic descriptions. Since symmetric structures need less information to encode, they are much more likely to appear as potential variation. Combined with an arrival-of-the-frequent mechanism, this algorithmic bias predicts a much higher prevalence of low-complexity (high-symmetry) phenotypes than follows from natural selection alone and also explains patterns observed in protein complexes, RNA secondary structures, and a gene regulatory network.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Information Theory , Selection, Genetic , Algorithms , Gene Regulatory Networks , Phenotype
8.
Bioinformatics ; 39(1)2023 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36511587

ABSTRACT

MOTIVATION: The evolution of bacterial drug resistance and other features in biology, the progression of cancer and other diseases and a wide range of broader questions can often be viewed as the sequential stochastic acquisition of binary traits (e.g. genetic changes, symptoms or characters). Using potentially noisy or incomplete data to learn the sequences by which such traits are acquired is a problem of general interest. The problem is complicated for large numbers of traits, which may, individually or synergistically, influence the probability of further acquisitions both positively and negatively. Hypercubic inference approaches, based on hidden Markov models on a hypercubic transition network, address these complications, but previous Bayesian instances can consume substantial time for converged results, limiting their practical use. RESULTS: Here, we introduce HyperHMM, an adapted Baum-Welch (expectation-maximization) algorithm for hypercubic inference with resampling to quantify uncertainty, and show that it allows orders-of-magnitude faster inference while making few practical sacrifices compared to previous hypercubic inference approaches. We show that HyperHMM allows any combination of traits to exert arbitrary positive or negative influence on the acquisition of other traits, relaxing a common limitation of only independent trait influences. We apply this approach to synthetic and biological datasets and discuss its more general application in learning evolutionary and progressive pathways. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: Code for inference and visualization, and data for example cases, is freely available at https://github.com/StochasticBiology/hypercube-hmm. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Software , Bayes Theorem , Probability , Uncertainty
9.
New Phytol ; 241(2): 896-910, 2024 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37925790

ABSTRACT

Organelle DNA (oDNA) in mitochondria and plastids is vital for plant (and eukaryotic) life. Selection against damaged oDNA is mediated in part by segregation - sorting different oDNA types into different cells in the germline. Plants segregate oDNA very rapidly, with oDNA recombination protein MSH1 a key driver of this segregation, but we have limited knowledge of the dynamics of this segregation within plants and between generations. Here, we reveal how oDNA evolves through Arabidopsis thaliana development and reproduction. We combine stochastic modelling, Bayesian inference, and model selection with new and existing tissue-specific oDNA measurements from heteroplasmic Arabidopsis plant lines through development and between generations. Segregation proceeds gradually but continually during plant development, with a more rapid increase between inflorescence formation and the next generation. When MSH1 is compromised, the majority of observed segregation can be achieved through partitioning at cell divisions. When MSH1 is functional, mtDNA segregation is far more rapid; we show that increased oDNA gene conversion is a plausible mechanism quantitatively explaining this acceleration. These findings reveal the quantitative, time-dependent details of oDNA segregation in Arabidopsis. We also discuss the support for different models of the plant germline provided by these observations.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins , Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Bayes Theorem , Mitochondria/metabolism , Plastids/genetics , Plants/metabolism , Reproduction , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , MutS DNA Mismatch-Binding Protein/genetics , MutS DNA Mismatch-Binding Protein/metabolism
10.
PLoS Biol ; 19(4): e3001153, 2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33891583

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and plastid DNA (ptDNA) encode vital bioenergetic apparatus, and mutations in these organelle DNA (oDNA) molecules can be devastating. In the germline of several animals, a genetic "bottleneck" increases cell-to-cell variance in mtDNA heteroplasmy, allowing purifying selection to act to maintain low proportions of mutant mtDNA. However, most eukaryotes do not sequester a germline early in development, and even the animal bottleneck remains poorly understood. How then do eukaryotic organelles avoid Muller's ratchet-the gradual buildup of deleterious oDNA mutations? Here, we construct a comprehensive and predictive genetic model, quantitatively describing how different mechanisms segregate and decrease oDNA damage across eukaryotes. We apply this comprehensive theory to characterise the animal bottleneck with recent single-cell observations in diverse mouse models. Further, we show that gene conversion is a particularly powerful mechanism to increase beneficial cell-to-cell variance without depleting oDNA copy number, explaining the benefit of observed oDNA recombination in diverse organisms which do not sequester animal-like germlines (for example, sponges, corals, fungi, and plants). Genomic, transcriptomic, and structural datasets across eukaryotes support this mechanism for generating beneficial variance without a germline bottleneck. This framework explains puzzling oDNA differences across taxa, suggesting how Muller's ratchet is avoided in different eukaryotes.


Subject(s)
Eukaryota/genetics , Germ Cells/metabolism , Mutation/physiology , Organelles/genetics , Animals , Arabidopsis , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Drosophila , Eukaryota/classification , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Genetic Speciation , Germ-Line Mutation/physiology , Humans , Mice , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondrial Dynamics/genetics , Models, Genetic , Mutagenesis/physiology , Mutation Rate , Organelle Biogenesis , Organelles/physiology
11.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 19(3): e1010953, 2023 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36952562

ABSTRACT

Mitochondria are highly dynamic organelles, containing vital populations of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) distributed throughout the cell. Mitochondria form diverse physical structures in different cells, from cell-wide reticulated networks to fragmented individual organelles. These physical structures are known to influence the genetic makeup of mtDNA populations between cell divisions, but their influence on the inheritance of mtDNA at divisions remains less understood. Here, we use statistical and computational models of mtDNA content inside and outside the reticulated network to quantify how mitochondrial network structure can control the variances of inherited mtDNA copy number and mutant load. We assess the use of moment-based approximations to describe heteroplasmy variance and identify several cases where such an approach has shortcomings. We show that biased inclusion of one mtDNA type in the network can substantially increase heteroplasmy variance (acting as a genetic bottleneck), and controlled distribution of network mass and mtDNA through the cell can conversely reduce heteroplasmy variance below a binomial inheritance picture. Network structure also allows the generation of heteroplasmy variance while controlling copy number inheritance to sub-binomial levels, reconciling several observations from the experimental literature. Overall, different network structures and mtDNA arrangements within them can control the variances of key variables to suit a palette of different inheritance priorities.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial , Mitochondria , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Mitochondria/genetics , Mitochondria/metabolism , Databases, Genetic , Cell Division/genetics
12.
Plant Cell Physiol ; 2023 Sep 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37658689

ABSTRACT

In plant cells, plastids form elongated extensions called stromules, the regulation and purposes of which remain unclear. Here, we quantitatively explore how different stromule structures serve to enhance the ability of a plastid to interact with other organelles: increasing the effective space for interaction and biomolecular exchange between organelles. Interestingly, electron microscopy and confocal imaging showed that the cytoplasm in Arabidopsis thaliana and Nicotiana benthamiana epidermal cells is extremely thin (around 100 nm in regions without organelles), meaning that inter-organelle interactions effectively take place in 2D. We combine these imaging modalities with mathematical modelling and new in planta experiments to demonstrate how different stromule varieties (single or multiple, linear or branching) could be employed to optimise different aspects of inter-organelle interaction capacity in this 2D space. We found that stromule formation and branching provide a proportionally higher benefit to interaction capacity in 2D than in 3D. Additionally, this benefit depends on optimal plastid spacing. We hypothesize that cells can promote the formation of different stromule architectures in the quasi-2D cytoplasm to optimise their interaction interface to meet specific requirements. These results provide new insight into the mechanisms underlying the transition from low to high stromule numbers, the consequences for interaction with smaller organelles, how plastid access and plastid to nucleus signaling are balanced, as well as the impact of plastid density on organelle interaction.

13.
Proc Biol Sci ; 290(1994): 20222140, 2023 03 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36883279

ABSTRACT

Mitochondria and plastids rely on many nuclear-encoded genes, but retain small subsets of the genes they need to function in their own organelle DNA (oDNA). Different species retain different numbers of oDNA genes, and the reasons for these differences are not completely understood. Here, we use a mathematical model to explore the hypothesis that the energetic demands imposed by an organism's changing environment influence how many oDNA genes it retains. The model couples the physical biology of cell processes of gene expression and transport to a supply-and-demand model for the environmental dynamics to which an organism is exposed. The trade-off between fulfilling metabolic and bioenergetic environmental demands, and retaining genetic integrity, is quantified for a generic gene encoded either in oDNA or in nuclear DNA. Species in environments with high-amplitude, intermediate-frequency oscillations are predicted to retain the most organelle genes, whereas those in less dynamic or noisy environments the fewest. We discuss support for, and insight from, these predictions with oDNA data across eukaryotic taxa, including high oDNA gene counts in sessile organisms exposed to day-night and intertidal oscillations (including plants and algae) and low counts in parasites and fungi.


Subject(s)
Eukaryotic Cells , Mitochondria , Species Specificity , Eukaryota
14.
J Exp Bot ; 73(16): 5428-5439, 2022 09 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35662332

ABSTRACT

Mitochondria form highly dynamic populations in the cells of plants (and almost all eukaryotes). The characteristics and benefits of this collective behaviour, and how it is influenced by nuclear features, remain to be fully elucidated. Here, we use a recently developed quantitative approach to reveal and analyse the physical and collective 'social' dynamics of mitochondria in an Arabidopsis msh1 mutant where the organelle DNA maintenance machinery is compromised. We use a newly created line combining the msh1 mutant with mitochondrially targeted green fluorescent protein (GFP), and characterize mitochondrial dynamics with a combination of single-cell time-lapse microscopy, computational tracking, and network analysis. The collective physical behaviour of msh1 mitochondria is altered from that of the wild type in several ways: mitochondria become less evenly spread, and networks of inter-mitochondrial encounters become more connected, with greater potential efficiency for inter-organelle exchange-reflecting a potential compensatory mechanism for the genetic challenge to the mitochondrial DNA population, supporting more inter-organelle exchange. We find that these changes are similar to those observed in friendly, where mitochondrial dynamics are altered by a physical perturbation, suggesting that this shift to higher connectivity may reflect a general response to mitochondrial challenges, where physical dynamics of mitochondria may be altered to control the genetic structure of the mtDNA population.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins , Arabidopsis , Arabidopsis/genetics , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Arabidopsis Proteins/genetics , Arabidopsis Proteins/metabolism , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , DNA/metabolism , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/metabolism , Mitochondrial Dynamics , MutS DNA Mismatch-Binding Protein/genetics , MutS DNA Mismatch-Binding Protein/metabolism
15.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 48(15): 8290-8301, 2020 09 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32716035

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) encodes cellular machinery vital for cell and organism survival. Mutations, genetic manipulation, and gene therapies may produce cells where different types of mtDNA coexist in admixed populations. In these admixtures, one mtDNA type is often observed to proliferate over another, with different types dominating in different tissues. This 'segregation bias' is a long-standing biological mystery that may pose challenges to modern mtDNA disease therapies, leading to substantial recent attention in biological and medical circles. Here, we show how an mtDNA sequence's balance between replication and transcription, corresponding to molecular 'selfishness', in conjunction with cellular selection, can potentially modulate segregation bias. We combine a new replication-transcription-selection (RTS) model with a meta-analysis of existing data to show that this simple theory predicts complex tissue-specific patterns of segregation in mouse experiments, and reversion in human stem cells. We propose the stability of G-quadruplexes in the mtDNA control region, influencing the balance between transcription and replication primer formation, as a potential molecular mechanism governing this balance. Linking mtDNA sequence features, through this molecular mechanism, to cellular population dynamics, we use sequence data to obtain and verify the sequence-specific predictions from this hypothesis on segregation behaviour in mouse and human mtDNA.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/physiology , Animals , Cattle , DNA Replication , Genetic Heterogeneity , Genome , Humans , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Models, Genetic , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid/physiology , Stem Cells , Transcription, Genetic
16.
J Evol Biol ; 34(5): 757-766, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33644926

ABSTRACT

Across eukaryotes, genes encoding bioenergetic machinery are located in both mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, and incompatibilities between the two genomes can be devastating. Mitochondria are often inherited maternally, and theory predicts sex-specific fitness effects of mitochondrial mutational diversity. Yet how evolution acts on linkage patterns between mitochondrial and nuclear genomes is poorly understood. Using novel mito-nuclear population-genetic models, we show that the interplay between nuclear and mitochondrial genes maintains mitochondrial haplotype diversity within populations, and selects both for sex-independent segregation of mitochondrion-interacting genes and for paternal leakage. These effects of genetic linkage evolution can eliminate male-harming fitness effects of mtDNA mutational diversity. With maternal mitochondrial inheritance, females maintain a tight mitochondrial-nuclear match, but males accumulate mismatch mutations because of the weak statistical associations between the two genomic components. Sex-independent segregation of mitochondria-interacting loci improves the mito-nuclear match. In a sexually antagonistic evolutionary process, male nuclear alleles evolve to increase the rate of recombination, whereas females evolve to suppress it. Paternal leakage of mitochondria can evolve as an alternative mechanism to improve the mito-nuclear linkage. Our modelling framework provides an evolutionary explanation for the observed paucity of mitochondrion-interacting genes on mammalian sex chromosomes and for paternal leakage in protists, plants, fungi and some animals.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Genetic Linkage , Genome, Mitochondrial , Models, Genetic , Sex Characteristics , Animals , Female , Male , Mutation , Recombination, Genetic , Selection, Genetic
17.
PLoS Comput Biol ; 15(6): e1007023, 2019 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31242175

ABSTRACT

The dynamics of the cellular proportion of mutant mtDNA molecules is crucial for mitochondrial diseases. Cellular populations of mitochondria are under homeostatic control, but the details of the control mechanisms involved remain elusive. Here, we use stochastic modelling to derive general results for the impact of cellular control on mtDNA populations, the cost to the cell of different mtDNA states, and the optimisation of therapeutic control of mtDNA populations. This formalism yields a wealth of biological results, including that an increasing mtDNA variance can increase the energetic cost of maintaining a tissue, that intermediate levels of heteroplasmy can be more detrimental than homoplasmy even for a dysfunctional mutant, that heteroplasmy distribution (not mean alone) is crucial for the success of gene therapies, and that long-term rather than short intense gene therapies are more likely to beneficially impact mtDNA populations.


Subject(s)
Cell Physiological Phenomena/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Energy Metabolism/genetics , Computational Biology , Humans , Models, Biological , Mutation/genetics , Stochastic Processes
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(25): 6629-6634, 2017 06 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28584126

ABSTRACT

Plants perceive and integrate information from the environment to time critical transitions in their life cycle. Some mechanisms underlying this quantitative signal processing have been described, whereas others await discovery. Seeds have evolved a mechanism to integrate environmental information by regulating the abundance of the antagonistically acting hormones abscisic acid (ABA) and gibberellin (GA). Here, we show that hormone metabolic interactions and their feedbacks are sufficient to create a bistable developmental fate switch in Arabidopsis seeds. A digital single-cell atlas mapping the distribution of hormone metabolic and response components revealed their enrichment within the embryonic radicle, identifying the presence of a decision-making center within dormant seeds. The responses to both GA and ABA were found to occur within distinct cell types, suggesting cross-talk occurs at the level of hormone transport between these signaling centers. We describe theoretically, and demonstrate experimentally, that this spatial separation within the decision-making center is required to process variable temperature inputs from the environment to promote the breaking of dormancy. In contrast to other noise-filtering systems, including human neurons, the functional role of this spatial embedding is to leverage variability in temperature to transduce a fate-switching signal within this biological system. Fluctuating inputs therefore act as an instructive signal for seeds, enhancing the accuracy with which plants are established in ecosystems, and distributed computation within the radicle underlies this signal integration mechanism.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/physiology , Germination/physiology , Plant Dormancy/physiology , Seeds/physiology , Abscisic Acid/metabolism , Arabidopsis/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant/physiology , Gibberellins/metabolism , Hormones/metabolism , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Seeds/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Temperature
20.
Am J Hum Genet ; 99(5): 1150-1162, 2016 Nov 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27843124

ABSTRACT

Populations of physiologically vital mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecules evolve in cells under control from the nucleus. The evolution of populations of mixed mtDNA types is complicated and poorly understood, and variability of these controlled admixtures plays a central role in the inheritance and onset of genetic disease. Here, we develop a mathematical theory describing the evolution of, and variability in, these stochastic populations for any type of cellular control, showing that cell-to-cell variability in mtDNA and mutant load inevitably increases with time, according to rates that we derive and which are notably independent of the mechanistic details of feedback signaling. We show with a set of experimental case studies that this theory explains disparate quantitative results from classical and modern experimental and computational research on heteroplasmy variance in different species. We demonstrate that our general model provides a host of specific insights, including a modification of the often-used but hard-to-interpret Wright formula to correspond directly to biological observables, the ability to quantify selective and mutational pressure in mtDNA populations, and characterization of the pronounced variability inevitably arising from the action of possible mtDNA quality-control mechanisms. Our general theoretical framework, supported by existing experimental results, thus helps us to understand and predict the evolution of stochastic mtDNA populations in cell biology.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Mitochondria/genetics , DNA Copy Number Variations , DNA, Mitochondrial/isolation & purification , Databases, Genetic , Humans , Mitochondria/metabolism , Models, Theoretical , Mutation , Reproducibility of Results
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