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Keywords = nuclear mitochondrial DNA segment (NUMT)

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13 pages, 1850 KiB  
Article
Bioinformatics Tools for NGS-Based Identification of Single Nucleotide Variants and Large-Scale Rearrangements in Mitochondrial DNA
by Marco Barresi, Giulia Dal Santo, Rossella Izzo, Andrea Zauli, Eleonora Lamantea, Leonardo Caporali, Daniele Ghezzi and Andrea Legati
BioTech 2025, 14(1), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/biotech14010009 - 12 Feb 2025
Viewed by 1334
Abstract
The unique features of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), including its circular and multicopy nature, the possible coexistence of wild-type and mutant molecules (i.e., heteroplasmy) and the presence of nuclear mitochondrial DNA segments (NUMTs), make the diagnosis of mtDNA diseases particularly challenging. The extensive deployment [...] Read more.
The unique features of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), including its circular and multicopy nature, the possible coexistence of wild-type and mutant molecules (i.e., heteroplasmy) and the presence of nuclear mitochondrial DNA segments (NUMTs), make the diagnosis of mtDNA diseases particularly challenging. The extensive deployment of next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies has significantly advanced the diagnosis of mtDNA-related diseases. However, the vast amounts and diverse types of sequencing data complicate the interpretation of these variants. From sequence alignment to variant calling, NGS-based mtDNA sequencing requires specialized bioinformatics tools, adapted for the mitochondrial genome. This study presents the use of new bioinformatics approaches, optimized for short- and long-read sequencing data, to enhance the accuracy of mtDNA analysis in diagnostics. Two recent and emerging free bioinformatics tools, Mitopore and MitoSAlt, were evaluated on patients previously diagnosed with single nucleotide variants or large-scale deletions. Analyses were performed in Linux-based environments and web servers implemented in Python, Perl, Java, and R. The results indicated that each tool demonstrated high sensitivity and specific accuracy in identifying and quantifying various types of pathogenic variants. The study suggests that the integrated and parallel use of these tools offers a significant advantage over traditional methods in interpreting mtDNA genetic variants, reducing the computational demands, and provides an accurate diagnostic solution. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Computational Biology)
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16 pages, 5201 KiB  
Article
Comprehensive Identification of Mitochondrial Pseudogenes (NUMTs) in the Human Telomere-to-Telomere Reference Genome
by Yichen Tao, Chengpeng He, Deng Lin, Zhenglong Gu and Weilin Pu
Genes 2023, 14(11), 2092; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes14112092 - 17 Nov 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2885
Abstract
Practices related to mitochondrial research have long been hindered by the presence of mitochondrial pseudogenes within the nuclear genome (NUMTs). Even though partially assembled human reference genomes like hg38 have included NUMTs compilation, the exhaustive NUMTs within the only complete reference genome (T2T-CHR13) [...] Read more.
Practices related to mitochondrial research have long been hindered by the presence of mitochondrial pseudogenes within the nuclear genome (NUMTs). Even though partially assembled human reference genomes like hg38 have included NUMTs compilation, the exhaustive NUMTs within the only complete reference genome (T2T-CHR13) remain unknown. Here, we comprehensively identified the fixed NUMTs within the reference genome using human pan-mitogenome (HPMT) from GeneBank. The inclusion of HPMT serves the purpose of establishing an authentic mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutational spectrum for the identification of NUMTs, distinguishing it from the polymorphic variations found in NUMTs. Using HPMT, we identified approximately 10% of additional NUMTs in three human reference genomes under stricter thresholds. And we also observed an approximate 6% increase in NUMTs in T2T-CHR13 compared to hg38, including NUMTs on the short arms of chromosomes 13, 14, and 15 that were not assembled previously. Furthermore, alignments based on 20-mer from mtDNA suggested the presence of more mtDNA-like short segments within the nuclear genome, which should be avoided for short amplicon or cell free mtDNA detection. Finally, through the assay of transposase-accessible chromatin with high-throughput sequencing (ATAC-seq) on cell lines before and after mtDNA elimination, we concluded that NUMTs have a minimal impact on bulk ATAC-seq, even though 16% of sequencing data originated from mtDNA Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Molecular Genetics and Genomics)
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15 pages, 1216 KiB  
Article
Complete Mitochondrial DNA Genome Variation in the Swedish Population
by Kimberly Sturk-Andreaggi, Martin Bodner, Joseph D. Ring, Adam Ameur, Ulf Gyllensten, Walther Parson, Charla Marshall and Marie Allen
Genes 2023, 14(11), 1989; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes14111989 - 25 Oct 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2563
Abstract
The development of complete mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) reference data for inclusion in publicly available population databases is currently underway, and the generation of more high-quality mitogenomes will only enhance the statistical power of this forensically useful locus. To characterize mitogenome variation in Sweden, [...] Read more.
The development of complete mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) reference data for inclusion in publicly available population databases is currently underway, and the generation of more high-quality mitogenomes will only enhance the statistical power of this forensically useful locus. To characterize mitogenome variation in Sweden, the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) reads from the SweGen whole genome sequencing (WGS) dataset were analyzed. To overcome the interference from low-frequency nuclear mtDNA segments (NUMTs), a 10% variant frequency threshold was applied for the analysis. In total, 934 forensic-quality mitogenome haplotypes were characterized. Almost 45% of the SweGen haplotypes belonged to haplogroup H. Nearly all mitogenome haplotypes (99.1%) were assigned to European haplogroups, which was expected based on previous mtDNA studies of the Swedish population. There were signature northern Swedish and Finnish haplogroups observed in the dataset (e.g., U5b1, W1a), consistent with the nuclear DNA analyses of the SweGen data. The complete mitogenome analysis resulted in high haplotype diversity (0.9996) with a random match probability of 0.15%. Overall, the SweGen mitogenomes provide a large mtDNA reference dataset for the Swedish population and also contribute to the effort to estimate global mitogenome haplotype frequencies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Improved Methods in Forensic DNA Analysis)
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11 pages, 2238 KiB  
Review
The Mighty NUMT: Mitochondrial DNA Flexing Its Code in the Nuclear Genome
by Liying Xue, Jesse D. Moreira, Karan K. Smith and Jessica L. Fetterman
Biomolecules 2023, 13(5), 753; https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13050753 - 27 Apr 2023
Cited by 20 | Viewed by 5090
Abstract
Nuclear-mitochondrial DNA segments (NUMTs) are mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) fragments that have been inserted into the nuclear genome. Some NUMTs are common within the human population but most NUMTs are rare and specific to individuals. NUMTs range in size from 24 base pairs to [...] Read more.
Nuclear-mitochondrial DNA segments (NUMTs) are mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) fragments that have been inserted into the nuclear genome. Some NUMTs are common within the human population but most NUMTs are rare and specific to individuals. NUMTs range in size from 24 base pairs to encompassing nearly the entire mtDNA and are found throughout the nuclear genome. Emerging evidence suggests that the formation of NUMTs is an ongoing process in humans. NUMTs contaminate sequencing results of the mtDNA by introducing false positive variants, particularly heteroplasmic variants present at a low variant allele frequency (VAF). In our review, we discuss the prevalence of NUMTs in the human population, the potential mechanisms of de novo NUMT insertion via DNA repair mechanisms, and provide an overview of the existing approaches for minimizing NUMT contamination. Apart from filtering known NUMTs, both wet lab-based and computational methods can be used to minimize the contamination of NUMTs in analyses of human mtDNA. Current approaches include: (1) isolating mitochondria to enrich for mtDNA; (2) applying basic local alignment to identify NUMTs for subsequent filtering; (3) bioinformatic pipelines for NUMT detection; (4) k-mer-based NUMT detection; and (5) filtering candidate false positive variants by mtDNA copy number, VAF, or sequence quality score. Multiple approaches must be applied in order to effectively identify NUMTs in samples. Although next-generation sequencing is revolutionizing our understanding of heteroplasmic mtDNA, it also raises new challenges with the high prevalence and individual-specific NUMTs that need to be handled with care in studies of mitochondrial genetics. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mitochondrial Genetic Variation in Health and Disease)
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20 pages, 1193 KiB  
Article
The Value of Whole-Genome Sequencing for Mitochondrial DNA Population Studies: Strategies and Criteria for Extracting High-Quality Mitogenome Haplotypes
by Kimberly Sturk-Andreaggi, Joseph D. Ring, Adam Ameur, Ulf Gyllensten, Martin Bodner, Walther Parson, Charla Marshall and Marie Allen
Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23(4), 2244; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23042244 - 17 Feb 2022
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 4500
Abstract
Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data present a readily available resource for mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) haplotypes that can be utilized for genetics research including population studies. However, the reconstruction of the mitogenome is complicated by nuclear mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) segments (NUMTs) that co-align with the [...] Read more.
Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) data present a readily available resource for mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) haplotypes that can be utilized for genetics research including population studies. However, the reconstruction of the mitogenome is complicated by nuclear mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) segments (NUMTs) that co-align with the mtDNA sequences and mimic authentic heteroplasmy. Two minimum variant detection thresholds, 5% and 10%, were assessed for the ability to produce authentic mitogenome haplotypes from a previously generated WGS dataset. Variants associated with NUMTs were detected in the mtDNA alignments for 91 of 917 (~8%) Swedish samples when the 5% frequency threshold was applied. The 413 observed NUMT variants were predominantly detected in two regions (nps 12,612–13,105 and 16,390–16,527), which were consistent with previously documented NUMTs. The number of NUMT variants was reduced by ~97% (400) using a 10% frequency threshold. Furthermore, the 5% frequency data were inconsistent with a platinum-quality mitogenome dataset with respect to observed heteroplasmy. These analyses illustrate that a 10% variant detection threshold may be necessary to ensure the generation of reliable mitogenome haplotypes from WGS data resources. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mitochondrial DNA and RNA)
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24 pages, 1517 KiB  
Article
Platinum-Quality Mitogenome Haplotypes from United States Populations
by Cassandra R. Taylor, Kevin M. Kiesler, Kimberly Sturk-Andreaggi, Joseph D. Ring, Walther Parson, Moses Schanfield, Peter M. Vallone and Charla Marshall
Genes 2020, 11(11), 1290; https://doi.org/10.3390/genes11111290 - 29 Oct 2020
Cited by 20 | Viewed by 6220
Abstract
A total of 1327 platinum-quality mitochondrial DNA haplotypes from United States (U.S.) populations were generated using a robust, semi-automated next-generation sequencing (NGS) workflow with rigorous quality control (QC). The laboratory workflow involved long-range PCR to minimize the co-amplification of nuclear mitochondrial DNA segments [...] Read more.
A total of 1327 platinum-quality mitochondrial DNA haplotypes from United States (U.S.) populations were generated using a robust, semi-automated next-generation sequencing (NGS) workflow with rigorous quality control (QC). The laboratory workflow involved long-range PCR to minimize the co-amplification of nuclear mitochondrial DNA segments (NUMTs), PCR-free library preparation to reduce amplification bias, and high-coverage Illumina MiSeq sequencing to produce an average per-sample read depth of 1000 × for low-frequency (5%) variant detection. Point heteroplasmies below 10% frequency were confirmed through replicate amplification, and length heteroplasmy was quantitatively assessed using a custom read count analysis tool. Data analysis involved a redundant, dual-analyst review to minimize errors in haplotype reporting with additional QC checks performed by EMPOP. Applying these methods, eight sample sets were processed from five U.S. metapopulations (African American, Caucasian, Hispanic, Asian American, and Native American) corresponding to self-reported identity at the time of sample collection. Population analyses (e.g., haplotype frequencies, random match probabilities, and genetic distance estimates) were performed to evaluate the eight datasets, with over 95% of haplotypes unique per dataset. The platinum-quality mitogenome haplotypes presented in this study will enable forensic statistical calculations and thereby support the usage of mitogenome sequencing in forensic laboratories. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Forensic Mitochondrial Genomics)
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