» Articles » PMID: 31181796

Immortalization of Different Breast Epithelial Cell Types Results in Distinct Mitochondrial Mutagenesis

Overview
Journal Int J Mol Sci
Publisher MDPI
Date 2019 Jun 12
PMID 31181796
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Different phenotypes of normal cells might influence genetic profiles, epigenetic profiles, and tumorigenicities of their transformed derivatives. In this study, we investigate whether the whole mitochondrial genome of immortalized cells can be attributed to the different phenotypes (stem vs. non-stem) of their normal epithelial cell originators. To accurately determine mutations, we employed Duplex Sequencing, which exhibits the lowest error rates among currently-available DNA sequencing methods. Our results indicate that the vast majority of the observed mutations of the whole mitochondrial DNA occur at low-frequency (rare mutations). The most prevalent rare mutation types are C→T/G→A and A→G/T→C transitions. Frequencies and spectra of homoplasmic point mutations are virtually identical between stem cell-derived immortalized (SV1) cells and non-stem cell-derived immortalized (SV22) cells, verifying that both cell types were derived from the same woman. However, frequencies of rare point mutations are significantly lower in SV1 cells (5.79 × 10) than in SV22 cells (1.16 × 10). The significantly lower frequencies of rare mutations are aligned with a finding of longer average distances to adjacent mutations in SV1 cells than in SV22 cells. Additionally, the predicted pathogenicity for rare mutations in the mitochondrial tRNA genes tends to be lower (by 2.5-fold) in SV1 cells than in SV22 cells. While four known/confirmed pathogenic mt-tRNA mutations (m.5650 G>A, m.5521 G>A, m.5690 A>G, m.1630 A>G) were identified in SV22 cells, no such mutations were observed in SV1 cells. Our findings suggest that the immortalization of normal cells with stem cell features leads to decreased mitochondrial mutagenesis, particularly in RNA gene regions. The mutation spectra and mutations specific to stem cell-derived immortalized cells (vs. non-stem cell derived) have implications in characterizing the heterogeneity of tumors and understanding the role of mitochondrial mutations in the immortalization and transformation of human cells.

Citing Articles

A triple hormone receptor ER, AR, and VDR signature is a robust prognosis predictor in breast cancer.

Omar M, Harrell J, Tamimi R, Marchionni L, Erdogan C, Nakshatri H Breast Cancer Res. 2024; 26(1):132.

PMID: 39272208 PMC: 11395215. DOI: 10.1186/s13058-024-01876-9.


Cell-of-Origin Targeted Drug Repurposing for Triple-Negative and Inflammatory Breast Carcinoma with HDAC and HSP90 Inhibitors Combined with Niclosamide.

Bhattacharya U, Kamran M, Manai M, Cristofanilli M, Ince T Cancers (Basel). 2023; 15(2).

PMID: 36672285 PMC: 9856736. DOI: 10.3390/cancers15020332.


ZNF92, an unexplored transcription factor with remarkably distinct breast cancer over-expression associated with prognosis and cell-of-origin.

Kamran M, Bhattacharya U, Omar M, Marchionni L, Ince T NPJ Breast Cancer. 2022; 8(1):99.

PMID: 36038558 PMC: 9424319. DOI: 10.1038/s41523-022-00474-2.

References
1.
Bu W, Liu Z, Jiang W, Nagi C, Huang S, Edwards D . Mammary Precancerous Stem and Non-Stem Cells Evolve into Cancers of Distinct Subtypes. Cancer Res. 2018; 79(1):61-71. PMC: 6318055. DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-18-1087. View

2.
Frosina G . The bright and the dark sides of DNA repair in stem cells. J Biomed Biotechnol. 2010; 2010:845396. PMC: 2852612. DOI: 10.1155/2010/845396. View

3.
Yin P, Wu C, Lin J, Chi C, Wei Y, Lee H . Somatic mutations of mitochondrial genome in hepatocellular carcinoma. Mitochondrion. 2009; 10(2):174-82. DOI: 10.1016/j.mito.2009.12.147. View

4.
Pickrell A, Huang C, Kennedy S, Ordureau A, Sideris D, Hoekstra J . Endogenous Parkin Preserves Dopaminergic Substantia Nigral Neurons following Mitochondrial DNA Mutagenic Stress. Neuron. 2015; 87(2):371-81. PMC: 4803114. DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.06.034. View

5.
Alexandrov L, Nik-Zainal S, Wedge D, Campbell P, Stratton M . Deciphering signatures of mutational processes operative in human cancer. Cell Rep. 2013; 3(1):246-59. PMC: 3588146. DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2012.12.008. View