U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Investigation of Heteroplasmy in the Human Mitochondrial DNA Control Region: A Synthesis of Observations from More Than 5000 Global Population Samples

NCJ Number
300555
Author(s)
J. A. Irwin; et al
Date Published
2009
Length
12 pages
Annotation

This article reports on a project in which Instances of point and length heteroplasmy in the mitochondrial DNA control region were compiled and analyzed from over 5,000 global human population samples.

Abstract

These data represent observations from a large and broad population sample, representing nearly 20 global populations. As expected, length heteroplasmy was frequently observed in the HVI, HVII and HVIII C-stretches. Length heteroplasmy was also observed in the AC dinucleotide repeat region, as well as other locations. Point heteroplasmy was detected in approximately 6 percent of all samples, and although the vast majority of heteroplasmic samples comprised two molecules differing at a single position, samples that exhibited two and three mixed positions were also observed in this data set. In general, the sites at which heteroplasmy was most often observed correlated with reported control region mutational hotspots; however, for some sites, observations of heteroplasmy did not mirror established mutation rate data, suggesting the action of other mechanisms, both selective and neutral. Interestingly, these data indicate that the frequency of heteroplasmy differs between populations, perhaps reflecting variable mutation rates among different mtDNA lineages and/or artifacts of particular population groups. The results presented here contribute to a general understanding of mitochondrial DNA control region heteroplasmy and provide additional empirical information on the mechanisms contributing to mtDNA control region mutation and evolution. (publisher abstract modified)

Downloads