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Genetic variation in PARL influences mitochondrian content

journal contribution
posted on 2010-02-28, 00:00 authored by J Curran, Jeremy Jowett, L Abraham, L Diepeveen, K Elliott, T Dyer, L Kerr-Bayles, M Johnson, A Comuzzie, E Moses, Ken WalderKen Walder, Gregory Collier, J Blangero, A Kissebah
Given their involvement in processes necessary for life, mitochondrial damage and subsequent dysfunction can lead to a wide range of human diseases. Previous studies of both animal models and humans have suggested that presenilins-associated rhomboid-like protein (PARL) is a key regulator of mitochondrial integrity and function, and plays a role in cellular apoptosis. As a surrogate measure of mitochondrial integrity, we previously measured mitochondrial content in a Caucasian population consisting of large extended pedigrees, with results highlighting a substantial genetic component to this trait. To assess the inXuence of variation in the PARL gene on mitochondrial content, we re-sequenced 6.5 kb of the gene, identifying 16 SNPs and genotyped these in 1,086 Caucasian individuals, distributed across 170 families. Statistical genetic analysis revealed that one promoter variant, T-191C, exhibited signiWcant eVects (after correction for multiple testing) on mitochondrial content levels. Comparison of the transcription factor binding characteristics of the T-191C promoter SNP by EMSA indicates preferential binding of nuclear factors to the T allele, suggesting functional variation in PARL expression. These results suggest that genetic variation within PARL inXuences mitochondrial abundance and integrity.

History

Journal

Human genetics

Volume

127

Issue

2

Pagination

183 - 190

Publisher

Springer

Location

Heidelberg, Germany

ISSN

0340-6717

eISSN

1432-1203

Language

eng

Notes

Published online: 28 October 2009

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Springer-Verlag