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Precision mitochondrial medicine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 November 2022

Patrick F. Chinnery*
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge, UK Medical Research Council Mitochondrial Biology Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Cambridge, UK
*
Author for correspondence: Patrick F. Chinnery, Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Mitochondria play a key role in cell homeostasis as a major source of intracellular energy (adenosine triphosphate), and as metabolic hubs regulating many canonical cell processes. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been widely documented in many common diseases, and genetic studies point towards a causal role in the pathogenesis of specific late-onset disorder. Together this makes targeting mitochondrial genes an attractive strategy for precision medicine. However, the genetics of mitochondrial biogenesis is complex, with over 1,100 candidate genes found in two different genomes: the nuclear DNA and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Here, we review the current evidence associating mitochondrial genetic variants with distinct clinical phenotypes, with some having clear therapeutic implications. The strongest evidence has emerged through the investigation of rare inherited mitochondrial disorders, but genome-wide association studies also implicate mtDNA variants in the risk of developing common diseases, opening to door for the incorporation of mitochondrial genetic variant analysis in population disease risk stratification.

Type
Review
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© University of Cambridge, 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

Mitochondria are cellular metabolic hubs that play a key role energy metabolism and intracellular signalling. They are synthesised from two distinct genomes: nuclear DNA and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and are assembled from ~5% of the cell proteome. Genetic variation of both mtDNA and nuclear DNA coding for mitochondrial proteins influences cell function and can contribute to human diseases. Severe mutations of both genomes cause monogenic mitochondrial disorders which affect~1/5000 and have a wide range of clinical presentations which overlap with common diseases and have distinct natural histories and recurrence risks. Reaching a precise genetic diagnosis has important implications for clinical management, with new treatments emerging for specific genetic groups. More subtle polymorphic variation of mtDNA interacts with the nuclear genome and the environment to modify the risk of developing several complex traits, and genetic variation of both nuclear and mtDNA can alter the risk of developing adverse drug reactions. These observations highlight the potential impact of incorporating analysis of genes coding for the mitochondrial proteome, but the field is in its infancy and ripe for further development.

Introduction

Mitochondria are ubiquitous compartments present in all nucleated mammalian cells. They are the principal source of intracellular energy in the form of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) which is generated through oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Although ATP can also be generated anaerobically by glycolysis, aerobic OXPHOS produces far more ATP. This is essential for anabolic processes including protein synthesis and cell division, and also physiological functions including neuronal firing, cardiac and skeletal muscle contraction, hormone biosynthesis and secretion. In addition to their role in energy metabolism, mitochondria also act as metabolic hubs modulating and controlling multiple cellular mechanisms including calcium signalling, and as key partners in programmed cell death (apoptosis). As a consequence, mitochondria are central to human physiology and therefore, not surprisingly, have been implicated in the pathogenesis of many different human diseases (Vafai and Mootha, Reference Vafai and Mootha2013; Wallace, Reference Wallace2018).

Mitochondrial biogenesis

Mitochondria are currently estimated to incorporate over 1,100 proteins (Rath et al., Reference Rath, Sharma and Gupta2021). The vast majority of these are encoded by the nuclear genome, but 13 are synthesised from small circles of double-stranded DNA present within the mitochondrial matrix: mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA, Figure 1). The nuclear gene products include structural sub-units involved in OXPHOS that physically interface with mtDNA-encoded components to deliver ATP synthesis. Additional nuclear proteins are involved in the maintenance of mtDNA, mtDNA transcription, intra-mitochondrial protein synthesis and the structural integrity of the organelle itself.

Figure 1. Human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). The 16,569 base pair human mtDNA includes an inner ‘light’ (L)-strand and an outer ‘heavy’ (H)-strand. mtDNA genes encoding structural sub-units of the mitochondrial respiratory chain include ND1–ND6 and ND4L (complex I), CYB (complex III), CO1–3 (complex IV), and ATP6 and ATP8 (complex V). The 22 tRNA and 2 rRNA genes are interspersed between the peptide-encoding genes and are essential for protein synthesis within mitochondria (amino acid letter codes). mtDNA replication is initiated by transcription within the non-coding mtDNA displacement (D) loop and proceeds from the origin of heavy-strand replication (OH, also known as OriH) until the origin of light-strand replication (OL) is exposed, allowing light-strand synthesis to proceed clockwise until the entire molecule is copied. Alternatively, symmetric strand-coupled replication might occur in certain circumstances. Source: Adapted from Nature Reviews Genetics , 16, 2015, 530–42, Springer Nature.

Mitochondrial DNA

Each cell contains multiple copies of mtDNA (Figure 2) with the precise amount being tightly regulated and varying from cell type to cell type: at one extreme, sperm contain ~100 mtDNA molecules, whereas skeletal muscle fibres contain many tens of thousands of molecules. Human mtDNA is 16.5 Kb and codes for 13 structural sub-units of the OXPHOS system and 24 RNAs which play a key role in intramitochondrial protein synthesis (Stewart and Chinnery, Reference Stewart and Chinnery2015). Only a small 1.1 Kb segment of mtDNA is non-coding and involved in regulating replication and transcription of the mitochondrial genome, including a third strand of DNA called the displacement or ‘D’-loop which incorporates the poorly understood 7S DNA. mtDNA has a different amino-acid code to the nuclear genome and is exclusively maternally inherited in the general population. Although there have been recent reports of apparent paternal transmission of mtDNA (Luo et al., Reference Luo, Valencia and Zhang2018), there are other likely explanations for these findings (Rius et al., Reference Rius, Cowley, Riley, Puttick, Thorburn and Christodoulou2019; Wei et al., Reference Wei, Pagnamenta and Gleadall2020; Bai et al., Reference Bai, Cui and Devaney2021; Lutz-Bonengel et al., Reference Lutz-Bonengel, Niederstatter and Naue2021) (discussed below).

Figure 2. mtDNA heteroplasmy and the threshold effect. Recent mtDNA mutations are usually heteroplasmic. Organs, cells and probably mitochondria can contain varying proportions of mutated and wild-type mtDNA. If a mutation is pathogenic, the cell can usually tolerate a high percentage level before the biochemical threshold is exceeded and a biochemical defect develops. The level of heteroplasmy can vary between individuals within the same family, and also change during life in some tissues and organs. Source: Adapted from Nature Reviews Genetics, 16, 2015, 530–42, Springer Nature.

Heteroplasmy and the threshold effect

Mutations of mtDNA can affect a proportion of the molecules (heteroplasmy) usually reflecting in their recent origin. Most mtDNA mutations only affect OXPHOS when the proportion of mutated molecules exceeds a critical threshold value, typically greater than 50%. Several mutations only affect cellular biochemistry when greater than 75% of mtDNA molecules are affected (Figure 2; Stewart and Chinnery, Reference Stewart and Chinnery2015, Reference Stewart and Chinnery2020). Not only does the biochemical threshold vary from mutation to mutation, but also from cell type to cell type. The level of heteroplasmy can vary from cell to cell, organ to organ and from individual to individual. The reasons for this are only partially being unravelled. For some mtDNA mutations, the absolute amount of wild-type mtDNA appears to determine whether a cell expresses a biochemical defect (i.e., the mutations are haploinsufficient; Durham et al., Reference Durham, Samuels, Cree and Chinnery2007), but this is not the case for others, where a very high percentage level of the mutation is required to have an effect (Boulet et al., Reference Boulet, Karpati and Shoubridge1992). Very high thresholds probably reflect functional complementation by the residual wild-type molecules, which is only compromised when the proportion of mutant mtDNA is extremely high and wild-type levels correspondingly very low (Yoneda et al., Reference Yoneda, Miyatake and Attardi1994; Attardi et al., Reference Attardi, Yoneda and Chomyn1995). If all of the mtDNA is identical, this situation is termed ‘homoplasmy’.

Maternal inheritance and the genetic bottleneck

Profound differences in mtDNA heteroplasmy levels are often seen amongst siblings within the same maternal pedigree (Lightowlers et al., Reference Lightowlers, Chinnery, Turnbull and Howell1997). Similar observations in Holstein cows led to the mtDNA genetic bottleneck hypothesis (Ashley et al., Reference Ashley, Laipis and Hausworth1989), whereby a reduction in the amount of mtDNA passed from mother to child leads to a statistical sampling effect, with different proportions of mutant and wild-type mtDNA being passed on to each offspring (Figure 3). Recent evidence across several species supports the existence of a physical reduction in the amount of mtDNA passed from one generation to the next (Cree et al., Reference Cree, Samuels and de Sousa Lopes2008; Wai et al., Reference Wai, Teoli and Shoubridge2008; Otten et al., Reference Otten, Theunissen and Derhaag2016; Floros et al., Reference Floros, Pyle and Dietmann2018). The key steps occur during early oocyte development in the developing female embryo, when the amount of mtDNA falls to ~200 molecules in each primordial germ cell (PGC) in mice (Cree et al., Reference Cree, Samuels and de Sousa Lopes2008; Wai et al., Reference Wai, Teoli and Shoubridge2008), and ~500 copies in human PGCs (Floros et al., Reference Floros, Pyle and Dietmann2018). In silico modelling has shown that this reduction is sufficient to cause a sampling effect leading to very different levels of heteroplasmy in primary oocytes generated from PGCs (Cree et al., Reference Cree, Samuels and de Sousa Lopes2008), thus determining the level of heteroplasmy passed on to the next generation. Selective forces acting for and against propagation of specific mtDNA mutations can modulate this further (Stewart et al., Reference Stewart, Freyer and Elson2008; Freyer et al., Reference Freyer, Cree and Mourier2012; Sharpley et al., Reference Sharpley, Marciniak and Eckel-Mahan2012). Similar genetic bottlenecks also occur probably in somatic tissues contributing to different levels of heteroplasmy in different organs (Cao et al., Reference Cao, Shitara and Horii2007; Floros et al., Reference Floros, Pyle and Dietmann2018; Barrett et al., Reference Barrett, Arbeithuber and Zaidi2020; Tang et al., Reference Tang, Lu and Chen2022).

Figure 3. mtDNA genetic bottleneck. A reduction in the amount of mtDNA passed from one generation to the next leads to a statistical sampling effect and very different proportions of mutant and wild-type mtDNA in the offspring of the next generation. Source: Adapted from Nature Genetics 40, 2008, 249–54, Springer Nature.

Precision diagnosis of rare mitochondrial disorders

Our first insight into the role of mitochondrial genetic variants in precision medicine arose through the investigation of patients with rare inherited primary mitochondrial diseases.

Primary mitochondrial disorders – definition and prevalence

Primary mitochondrial disorders are presumed genetic disorders leading to a primary defect of OXPHOS and ATP synthesis (Gorman et al., Reference Gorman, Chinnery and DiMauro2016). It is important to distinguish these from the many different mitochondrial biochemical abnormalities described as a secondary phenomenon in many common and rare disorders. Genetic epidemiology studies have shown that primary mitochondrial disorders affect ~1 in 4,300 of the general population (Gorman et al., Reference Gorman, Schaefer and Ng2015).

Clinical heterogeneity

Given the central role of mitochondrial ATP production in many different organ systems, it is perhaps not surprising that mitochondrial disorders can affect multiple different organ systems. Typically, they involve tissues and organs with a high ATP dependence including the brain, hearing, visual and neuromuscular systems, the heart and endocrine glands including pancreatic islets (Gorman et al., Reference Gorman, Chinnery and DiMauro2016). The clinical overlap with common disorders, coupled with the fact that different individuals in the same family may have different organs and tissues involved, has made the clinical diagnosis of mitochondrial disorders, particularly challenging. As a rule of thumb, people who have a multisystem disorder with some neurological involvement and no obvious explanation should be considered to have a possible mitochondrial disorder. Several classical mitochondrial clinical syndromes have been described (Table 1), but many patients do not share all of the clinical features defined by canonical syndromic diagnoses. Intriguingly, some mitochondrial disorders are highly organ specific, causing sensorineural deafness, or visual impairment due to involvement of the retinal ganglion cell. However, many mitochondrial disorders involve multiple organ systems with many degrees of severity. Many children have multisystem mitochondrial disorders that do not fit neatly into one of the previously described clinical syndromes. Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain tissue selectivity and clinical heterogeneity, including differences in the burden of mtDNA mutations between tissues and organs (heteroplasmy, see above), and the existence of different tissue-specific isoforms of the nuclear-encoded OXPHOS sub-units – but our understanding is far from complete.

Table 1. Canonical mitochondrial disease clinical syndromes

Source: Adapted from Pfeffer and Chinnery (Reference Pfeffer and Chinnery2013).

Genetic basis of mitochondrial disorders

Inherited mitochondrial disorders are caused by mutations in either nuclear genes encoding for mitochondrial proteins or mtDNA. The first pathogenic mutations of mtDNA were identified three decades ago. Three different homoplasmic missense mutations in respiratory chain genes encoding for complex 1 sub-units have been identified in families with Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON: m.11778A>G, m.3460A>G and m.14484T>C; Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Singh and Lott1988; Howell et al., Reference Howell, Bindoff and McCullough1991). LHON is a maternally inherited disorder that causes sub-acute visual failure presenting in mid-adult life. It remains the most common mitochondrial disease worldwide, but is unusual, because the phenotype is highly tissue specific and the underlying mtDNA mutations have a striking incomplete penetrance: the ratio of affected males to females is approximately 4:1, with 40% of male mutation carriers and ~10% of females developing symptoms (Carelli et al., Reference Carelli, Ross-Cisneros and Sadun2004). Early on it was recognised that a particular mitochondrial genetic background was associated with the disorder (Brown et al., Reference Brown, Torroni, Reckord and Wallace1995), and recent population studies have shown that common polymorphisms influence the clinical penetrance of the underlying pathogenic mtDNA mutation (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Carelli and Spruijt2007). Remarkably, LHON mtDNA mutations are found in ~1:300 of the population (Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Samuels, Eden, Relton and Chinnery2008) and both environmental and additional genetic interactions likely play a key role in clinical expression, most notably cigarette smoking and heavy alcohol use (Kirkman et al., Reference Kirkman, Yu-Wai-Man and Korsten2009). Thus, LHON has set the paradigm for gene–environment interactions in mitochondrial disorders and provides evidence of epistasis between different genetic variants within the mtDNA, and possibly the nuclear genome.

Around the same time, the first heteroplasmic pathogenic mutations were identified. Mutations in the transfer RNA gene for Leucine UUR were described in families with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS; Goto et al., Reference Goto, Nonaka and Horai1990). Although subsequent work has shown that the full clinical syndrome is actually uncommon, the same mutation has been associated with maternally inherited diabetes, an eye movement disorder called chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO), and/or maternally inherited diabetes and deafness. The m.3243A>G MTTL1 mutation remains the most common heteroplasmic mtDNA mutation presenting in the clinic (Ng et al., Reference Ng, Bindoff and Gorman2021).

Finally, large-scale deletions of mtDNA were found to encompass key mitochondrial structural genes and transfer RNA genes causing CPEO either in isolation or in combination with other central neurological features, diabetes and cardiac induction block as a part of the Kearns–Sayre syndrome (Zeviani et al., Reference Zeviani, Moraes and DiMauro1988; Moraes et al., Reference Moraes, DiMauro and Zeviani1989). Unlike the previous two disorders, large-scale mtDNA deletions are only very rarely inherited and usually caused a sporadic disorder (Chinnery et al., Reference Chinnery, DiMauro and Shanske2004).

The last three decades have seen a huge increase in the number of different point mutations and deletions of mtDNA associated with primary mitochondrial disorders, some with overlapping phenotypes and some associated with distinct clinical syndromes which are either tissue specific or involve multiple different organ systems.

Nuclear gene mutations causing mitochondrial diseases

The first likely nuclear genetic disorders causing mitochondrial diseases were identified in 1989. Families with autosomal dominant CPEO showing clear male-to-male transmission were described with multiple secondary deletions of mtDNA in skeletal muscle (Zeviani et al., Reference Zeviani, Sevidei, Gallera, Bertini, DiMauro and DiDonato1989). This raised the concept of ‘disorders of mtDNA maintenance’, with the underlying nuclear genetic basis for disorders being identified several years later (Spelbrink et al., Reference Spelbrink, Li and Tiranti2001; Van Goethem et al., Reference Van Goethem, Dermaut, Lofgren, Martin and Van Broeckhoven2001). These findings opened up the field to identify further nuclear genetic mitochondrial disorders, including defects affecting mtDNA maintenance, individual respiratory chain sub-units or their assembly, genes maintaining mitochondrial structural integrity or involved in fission and fusion of mitochondria, and genes involved in the intra-mitochondrial protein synthesis (Wallace, Reference Wallace2018; Gusic and Prokisch, Reference Gusic and Prokisch2021). Initial candidate gene and genetic linkage studies were superseded by next-generation sequencing approaches involving panels (Lieber et al., Reference Lieber, Calvo and Shanahan2013), exome sequencing (Taylor et al., Reference Taylor, Pyle and Griffin2014), transcriptomics (Stenton and Prokisch, Reference Stenton and Prokisch2020a, Reference Stenton and Prokisch2020b) and latterly whole-genome sequencing (WGS) (Riley et al., Reference Riley, Cowley and Gayevskiy2020; Schon et al., Reference Schon, Horvath and Wei2021). The number of genes identified in families with biochemical evidence of mitochondrial disease continues to increase, with ~350 identified to date (Schon et al., Reference Schon, Ratnaike, van den Ameele, Horvath and Chinnery2020). This falls far short of the predicted number of different mitochondrial proteins (~1,100) indicating there are further disease genes yet to discover, although it is possible that some of these genes have such a catastrophic effect that we will never see them present in the clinic.

Investigation of suspected mitochondrial diseases

The traditional approach for investigating mitochondrial diseases involves assimilating a portfolio of clinical evidence supplemented by the investigation of vulnerable organ systems, followed by a tissue biopsy leading to histochemical and/or biochemical investigation of the OXPHOS system (Taylor et al., Reference Taylor, Taylor, Morris, Edwardson and Turnbull1998). This approach requires the involvement of specialist laboratories, is time consuming, expensive and can lead to protracted diagnostic odyssey (Grier et al., Reference Grier, Hirano, Karaa, Shepard and Thompson2018). It is also not completely definitive, because many individuals with known mitochondrial disorders do not have detectable biochemical abnormalities using conventional diagnostic tests. The particular pattern of histochemical or biochemical defect has helped target molecular genetic analyses, which was particularly valuable when the capability for high-throughput sequencing was limited. This has changed dramatically over the last 5 years as explained below.

The added complexity of mtDNA heteroplasmy

Tissue differences in mtDNA heteroplasmy can present a challenge for molecular diagnosis. Non-dividing (post-mitotic) cell tissues typically have higher levels of heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations than dividing cells. At its most extreme, for the most common heteroplasmic mutation (m.3243A>G) the level of heteroplasmy decreases in blood over time, probably because of selection against the pathogenic variant at the stem cell level (Pyle et al., Reference Pyle, Taylor and Durham2007; Rajasimha et al., Reference Rajasimha, Chinnery and Samuels2008). This means that the heteroplasmy level can fall below the detection threshold for some molecular tests. This can be circumvented by studying skeletal muscle or other tissue such as urinary epithelial cells (McDonnell et al., Reference McDonnell, Schaefer and Blakely2004). For some mitochondrial disorders, particularly those caused by single large-scale mtDNA deletions, the underlying gene defects are undetectable in blood. The important clinical point here is that absence of an mtDNA mutation from blood does not exclude a high level in clinically relevant tissues, and clinicians suspecting a mitochondrial disorder should not stop their investigations if the initial molecular genetic tests come back negative.

Pitfall of pseudo-heteroplasmy

Segments of mtDNA have translocated from the organelle into the nucleus over evolutionary time (Dayama et al., Reference Dayama, Emery, Kidd and Mills2014). The majority of these reside in non-coding space and are epigenetically silenced. These so-called ‘nuclear mitochondrial sequences’ (NUMTS) can introduce a confounder in a molecular diagnostic pathway, resembling true mtDNA heteroplasmy (Wei et al., Reference Wei, Pagnamenta and Gleadall2020). This is the likely explanation for the recent description of apparent paternal transmission of mtDNA, which is more likely to be due to the transmission of NUMTS down the paternal line creating the impression of a heteroplasmic variant transmission (Rius et al., Reference Rius, Cowley, Riley, Puttick, Thorburn and Christodoulou2019; Wei et al., Reference Wei, Pagnamenta and Gleadall2020; Bai et al., Reference Bai, Cui and Devaney2021; Lutz-Bonengel et al., Reference Lutz-Bonengel, Niederstatter and Naue2021). Although in theory, this could lead to misdiagnosis of mtDNA diseases, in practice this is unlikely. In a recent survey of NUMTS in over 66,000 humans, there was no evidence that nuclear NUMTS sequences harboured variants resembling known pathogenic mtDNA mutations (Wei et al., Reference Wei, Schon, Elgar, Orioli, Tanguy, Giess, Tischkowitz, Caulfield and Chinnery2022). Nonetheless, this is a potential confounder that should be considered particularly during the exploration of new genetic causes for mitochondrial diseases. There are both molecular and bioinformatic approaches to minimise NUMTS contamination of mtDNA sequencing.

Genomic diagnosis

Standard diagnostic WGS approaches re-sequence an individual’s genome 40- to 60-fold to optimise the chance of detecting pathogenic variants with confidence. Given the very high copy number of mtDNA in blood, this means that standard WGS also provides a complete mtDNA sequence at ~2,000-fold, enabling the detection of heteroplasmic variants down to the variant allele frequency (VAF, or heteroplasmy level) ~1% (Wei et al., Reference Wei, Tuna and Keogh2019). The retrospective analysis of confirmed diagnoses of mitochondrial disease indicates that blood WGS is likely to detect over 90% of known pathogenic mutations of mtDNA and nuclear DNA, providing a strong argument that blood WGS should be the first-line diagnostic test (Raymond et al., Reference Raymond, Horvath and Chinnery2018). For the reasons explained above, in the absence of a clear diagnosis from WGS, the standard diagnostic algorithm is appropriate with the added benefit of providing biochemical functional evidence to support the molecular basis of a novel genetic variant or novel gene defect.

Current diagnostic yield and the implications of a negative test

Several studies have shown that the diagnostic yield of both exome and WGS depends on how carefully individual families are selected for investigation. The yield is greater when patients fulfil established diagnostic criteria (such as the Nijmegen criteria; Morava et al., Reference Morava, van den Heuvel and Hol2006), particularly if this involves the biochemical confirmation of an underlying respiratory chain enzyme deficiency (Lieber et al., Reference Lieber, Calvo and Shanahan2013; Taylor et al., Reference Taylor, Pyle and Griffin2014; Riley et al., Reference Riley, Cowley and Gayevskiy2020; Davis et al., Reference Davis, Raj and Puttick2022; Yepez et al., Reference Yepez, Gusic and Kopajtich2022). Perhaps the closest estimate of the true diagnostic yield in relatively unselected patients comes from the 100,000 Genomes Project in England, where patients with a suspect mitochondrial disorder were referred for WGS from both non-specialist and specialist centres (Schon et al., Reference Schon, Horvath and Wei2021). It is important to note that patients were only referred after undergoing conventional genetic investigations for a mitochondrial disorder. In this study, WGS delivered a molecular diagnosis in an additional 31% of families, with the highest yield in children, and particularly when parental DNA samples were available. However, over half of the new diagnoses were not classical mitochondrial diseases, emphasising the challenge of clinically defining a mitochondrial disorder up front. As mentioned above, WGS is capable of detecting >90% of currently known genetic causes of mitochondrial disease. Putting this information together, WGS has the potential to diagnose the vast majority of known mitochondrial diseases, approaching ~95% of referrals from secondary (hospital) care. However, it is important to note that patients with a positive genetic diagnosis do not fulfil clinical diagnostic criteria, and not all have a detectable biochemical abnormality, so it would be inappropriate to exclude patients from the opportunity to undergo exome or WGS in the absence of a classical clinical presentation.

There are several reasons why genetic testing can be negative in mitochondrial disorders: (i) for a mtDNA mutation, the level of heteroplasmy may be undetectable in the tested tissue (e.g., mtDNA deletions may not be detected in blood DNA, but reach high levels in skeletal muscle causing disease); (ii) the underlying causal nuclear gene may not be discovered yet; (iii) structural variants or repeat sequences may be missed using current diagnostic and bioinformatic pipelines; and (iv) detected variants may be difficult to interpret, perhaps lying in deep intronic regions. Thus, negative genetic testing does not exclude the diagnosis of a mitochondrial disorder. However, our capability to provide a WGS-based diagnosis for the mitochondrial disease has been greatly enhanced by the growing global data set of whole mtDNA and whole nuclear genome sequencing which facilitates interpretation (Wei et al., Reference Wei, Tuna and Keogh2019; Laricchia et al., Reference Laricchia, Lake and Watts2022), and this will undoubtedly improve in the coming years.

Importance of a genomic diagnosis for mitochondrial diseases

Reaching a genomic diagnosis has important implications for families with mitochondrial disease.

  • Prognosis and surveillance. The advent of molecular testing has allowed natural history studies of genetically defined groups at scale across the globe. This has provided an insight into prognosis and likely complications that can be effectively managed in individual patients. Typically this includes surveillance for cardiomyopathy, hearing loss and diabetes mellitus – all of which can be managed with standard approaches including transplantation and implantation.

  • Prevention. The different molecular diagnoses have profoundly different implications for the family, including a sporadic disorder (large-scale mtDNA deletion), maternal inheritance (pathogenic mtDNA mutation), or dominant recessive and x-linked inheritance. It is important to emphasise that, from a clinical perspective, it may be impossible to distinguish these options at the bedside. However, a molecular diagnosis enables reliable genetic counselling in each context and pre-natal or pre-implantation diagnosis. For mtDNA mutations, there is the added opportunity of mitochondrial transfer to prevent transmission (Hyslop et al., Reference Hyslop, Blakeley and Craven2016; Kang et al., Reference Kang, Wu and Gutierrez2016; Yamada et al., Reference Yamada, Emmanuele and Sanchez-Quintero2016; Chinnery, Reference Chinnery2020), which has been successfully used to prevent Leigh syndrome (Hamzelou, Reference Hamzelou2016).

  • Mechanisms and treatments. A precise genetic diagnosis enables targeted treatments such as co-enzyme Q10 and analogues in defects of ubiquinone biosynthesis (Yubero et al., Reference Yubero, Montero, Santos-Ocana, Salviati, Navas and Artuch2018), or riboflavin supplementation in patients with SLC52A2 mutations (Cali et al., Reference Cali, Dominik, Manole, Houlden, Adam, Mirzaa, Pagon, Wallace, Bean, Gripp and Amemiya1993). Several gene therapy approaches are also in development and require a precise molecular diagnosis (Di Donfrancesco et al., Reference Di Donfrancesco, Massaro, Di Meo, Tiranti, Bottani and Brunetti2022). Disease gene discovery for mitochondrial disorders has also identified many molecular pathways essential for mitochondrial biogenesis and maintenance. Many of these are attractive treatment targets that are currently being explored in pre-clinical studies, or in some instances through experimental medicine at early phase studies, often in partnership with industry (Nightingale et al., Reference Nightingale, Pfeffer, Bargiela, Horvath and Chinnery2016).

Genomic variants affecting mitochondrial function and common diseases

Primary genetic mitochondrial disorders share many clinical features with common human diseases, including Parkinson’s disease (PD), dementia, diabetes and hypertension (Gorman et al., Reference Gorman, Chinnery and DiMauro2016). This raises the possibility that genetic variants with less severe or catastrophic effects could be present in the population as polymorphisms and affect the risk of developing common complex late-onset human disorders (Stewart and Chinnery, Reference Stewart and Chinnery2015). Animal models with specific primary mitochondrial disorders share some of these phenotypes including features of premature ageing (Kujoth et al., Reference Kujoth, Hiona and Pugh2005). These combined observations opened up a field of enquiry that is yielding results likely to be important for precision medicine.

Role of common nuclear genomic variants in common diseases

Building on the observation of specific phenotypes seen in rare primary mitochondrial disease patients, candidate nuclear gene studies have been performed to determine whether or not polymorphic variants in the same gene might be genetic risk factors for common disorders. There are several examples in the literature, perhaps most notably in POLG, the gene coding for the only mtDNA polymerase Υ. Common polymorphic variants and heterozygous pathogenic mutations have been reported in association with late-onset idiopathic PD (Luoma et al., Reference Luoma, Eerola and Ahola2007), although not all studies have reproduced these findings (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Tiangyou and Stutt2009). Likewise, the 16184–16193 poly-C length variant in the mtDNA non-coding region has been associated with type 2 diabetes in specific populations (Poulton et al., Reference Poulton, Luan, Macaulay, Hennings, Mitchell and Wareham2002), but not others (Chinnery et al., Reference Chinnery, Elliott and Patel2005). The majority of candidate gene studies have been underpowered for the effect size being reported, questioning the strength of the original findings, which often did not incorporate well-known nuclear genetic risk loci in the same analyses. Although mitochondrial genes have fallen within high-risk loci mapped for common disorders in hypothesis-free genome-wide association studies (as for ATP5G1 in type 2 diabetes) (Xue et al., Reference Xue, Wu and Zhu2018), a recent meta-analysis found no evidence of enrichment for mitochondrial genes in genome-wide association data for 24 age-related human traits (Gupta et al., Reference Gupta, Karczewski, Howrigan, Neale and Mootha2021). There are therefore no convincing validated examples of specific nuclear alleles associated with common diseases within known mitochondrial genes. This is, perhaps, surprising given the previous arguments made in this review. However, the functional redundancy of essential metabolic pathways and the semi-autonomous nature of mitochondria are potential explanations (Gupta et al., Reference Gupta, Karczewski, Howrigan, Neale and Mootha2021).

Mitochondrial DNA

Ultimately de novo mtDNA mutations affect a single molecule and begin in a heteroplasmic state. Over time, the level of heteroplasmy can increase or decrease, with a rate of segregation accelerated by the germ line genetic bottleneck (see above). Ultimately a genetic variant may become fixed in the maternal line and thus be homoplasmic (Stewart and Chinnery, Reference Stewart and Chinnery2015). Both heteroplasmic and homoplasmic variants of mtDNA have been associated with disease (Stewart and Chinnery, Reference Stewart and Chinnery2020).

Population genetics of mtDNA

The uniparental inheritance of mtDNA has been exploited by anthropologists to study human population migrations. As modern humans emerged from Africa ~150,000 years ago and spread around the globe, the different regional populations acquired different mtDNA variants defining so-called haplogroups (Wallace, Reference Wallace1994). The frequency of specific haplogroups can vary over relatively short geographical distances, likely due to genetic drift and population bottleneck effects that particularly affect less common genetic variants (Yonova-Doing et al., Reference Yonova-Doing, Calabrese and Gomez-Duran2021). However, an analysis of over 30,000 human mtDNA sequences sampled from across the globe shows that the haplogroup defining mitochondrial DNA Single Nucleotide Variants (mtSNVs) are not randomly distributed across the genome (Wei et al., Reference Wei, Gomez-Duran, Hudson and Chinnery2017). These findings implicate selected forces acting for and against genetic variants at particular sites based on their functional consequences. Biochemical studies using cybrid cell lines, which control for the underlying nuclear genetic background, add weight to the idea that common mtDNA polymorphisms can have functional effects on mitochondrial function which extend beyond OXPHOS (Gomez-Duran et al., Reference Gomez-Duran, Pacheu-Grau and Lopez-Gallardo2010, Reference Gomez-Duran, Pacheu-Grau and Martinez-Romero2012). Population genetic studies have cast further light on this.

Evidence haplogroups an effect in primary mtDNA disorders

The strongest evidence that mtDNA haplogroups influence human disease comes from the investigations of LHON, which in Europeans is caused by one of three homoplasmic mtDNA mutations: m.11778G>A, m.14484T>C and m.3460A>G (see above) (Wallace et al., Reference Wallace, Singh and Lott1988; Howell et al., Reference Howell, Bindoff and McCullough1991; Johns and Berman, Reference Johns and Berman1991). Shortly after their first definition, it was recognised that these mutations preferentially associate with mtDNA haplogroup J which is found in ~11% of Europeans (Torroni et al., Reference Torroni, Petrozzi and D’Urbano1997). Detailed mtDNA genotyping showed that the association was not due to founder effects, with the most marked association for m.14484T>C (Torroni et al., Reference Torroni, Petrozzi and D’Urbano1997). Recent population studies have shown that the mtDNA haplogroup likely influences the clinical penetrance of the underlying pathogenic mtDNA variant (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Carelli and Spruijt2007; Yonova-Doing et al., Reference Yonova-Doing, Calabrese and Gomez-Duran2021). Extensive biochemical analyses support evidence of biochemical interaction between the different genetic variants (Carelli et al., Reference Carelli, Ghelli and Bucchi1999; Gomez-Duran et al., Reference Gomez-Duran, Pacheu-Grau and Martinez-Romero2012), adding weight to the concept that similar haplogroup-specific genetic variation could contribute to common human diseases where mitochondrial dysfunction is important.

Preliminary evidence that mtDNA haplogroups affect common disease risk

Many candidate gene studies have been performed looking for evidence of association between mtDNA haplogroups and common disorders including asthenozoospermia (Ruiz-Pesini et al., Reference Ruiz-Pesini, Lapena and Diez-Sanchez2000), type 2 diabetes and its complications (Kofler et al., Reference Kofler, Mueller and Eder2009; Achilli et al., Reference Achilli, Olivieri and Pala2011; Estopinal et al., Reference Estopinal, Chocron and Parks2014; Bregman et al., Reference Bregman, Herren and Estopinal2017), coronary artery disease (Kofler et al., Reference Kofler, Mueller and Eder2009; Mueller et al., Reference Mueller, Eder and Ebner2011), hypertension (Zhu et al., Reference Zhu, Wang and Martin2009), multiple sclerosis (Ban et al., Reference Ban, Elson and Walton2008), and neurodegenerative disorders including PD (Ghezzi et al., Reference Ghezzi, Marelli and Achilli2005) and Alzheimer’s disease (Santoro et al., Reference Santoro, Balbi and Balducci2010). The majority of these studies were relatively small, with several hundred participants, and few involved direct replication (Samuels et al., Reference Samuels, Carothers, Horton and Chinnery2006). Large-scale replication studies have been performed in a number of instances (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Sims and Harold2012, Reference Hudson, Nalls and Evans2013a,Reference Hudson, Panoutsopoulou and Wilson2013b; Kraja et al., Reference Kraja, Liu and Fetterman2019), most notably in idiopathic PD where the consistent effect on disease risk has been identified, with haplogroup UK reducing risk and haplogroup J increasing risk. In addition, mtDNA variants have been convincingly associated with metabolic phenotypes in several populations, raising the possibility that mtDNA variation could be combined with known nuclear risk loci in, for example, polygenic risk scores.

Population association studies of mtDNA variants

In a recent study, in 1928 people in the Japanese Biobank looked for associations between 2,023 mtDNA variants derived from whole-genome-sequence data to impute mtDNA variants in 147,437 Japanese individuals with 99 common traits (Yamamoto et al., Reference Yamamoto, Sakaue and Matsuda2020), and observed pleiotropy of mtDNA genetic risk on the five late-onset human complex traits including creatine kinase levels. A larger study of 473 mtDNA variants in 358,916 individuals in UK Biobank discovered 260 novel mtDNA-phenotype associations, including novel variants enriched in type 2 diabetes and multiple sclerosis (Yonova-Doing et al., Reference Yonova-Doing, Calabrese and Gomez-Duran2021). There were also many mtDNA associations with common physiological parameters including biochemical markers of liver and renal function, and routine blood cell measures including the red blood cell count, mean corpuscular haemoglobin, mean red blood cell volume (including the m.11778A>G LHON mutation, see above), platelet count and platelet volume. mtDNA variants were also associated with height and longevity, including the common m.1555A>G variant discussed below. Not all previously replicated disease associations were confirmed in this study (e.g., PD), because even at this scale, the number of affected individuals with a particular disease category was small compared to the targeted disease association studies performed previously. Overall, these findings support the concept that common polymorphic variants of mtDNA influence human characteristics and disease phenotypes in combination with other genetic and environmental aetiological factors, mirroring phenotypes seen in patients with severe primary mitochondrial disorders who harbour genetic defects that have more profound biochemical effects (Stewart and Chinnery, Reference Stewart and Chinnery2015). The underlying mechanisms are starting to be unravelled, and likely extend beyond OXPHOS. Recent evidence implicates cell proteostasis mediated through the circulating metabolite N-formylmethionine which plays a central role in mitochondrial protein synthesis (Cai et al., Reference Cai, Gomez-Duran and Yonova-Doing2021).

Heteroplasmic variants

High-depth mtDNA sequencing that accompanies WGS has enabled population-level studies of mtDNA heteroplasmy and its transmission (Li et al., Reference Li, Rothwell and Vermaat2016). For example, there is recent evidence that heteroplasmic mtDNA variants contribute to cardiovascular disease risk through an effect on blood pressure (Calabrese et al., Reference Calabrese, Pyle and Griffin2022). Some of these variants may emerge during life and possibly be a consequence of the disorder or its treatment, but some of the variants may have been maternally inherited, raising the possibility that heteroplasmic mtDNA variants contribute to the ‘missing heritability’ of some common diseases (Keogh and Chinnery, Reference Keogh and Chinnery2013). High levels of heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations have been detected in affected brain regions in PD (Bender et al., Reference Bender, Krishnan and Morris2006), Alzheimer’s disease (Corral-Debrinski et al., Reference Corral-Debrinski, Horton and Lott1994) and frontotemporal dementia (Nie et al., Reference Nie, Murley, Golder, Rowe, Allinson and Chinnery2022). Some of the mutations affect several brain regions, making it increasingly likely that they are maternally inherited, potentially contributing to the known increased risk of developing PD in maternal relatives. These findings are supported by mouse models where mtDNA heteroplasmy can contribute to premature ageing (Trifunovic et al., Reference Trifunovic, Wredenberg and Falkenberg2004; Kujoth et al., Reference Kujoth, Hiona and Pugh2005).

Mitochondrial genes in pharmacogenetics

There are a limited number of well-established associations between genetic variants in mitochondrial genes and drug-induced side effects. People with mitochondrial disease due to complex heterozygous mutations in the gene encoding the mtDNA polymerase Υ (POLG) are susceptible to sodium valproate-induced liver toxicity, as part of the Alpers–Huttenlocher syndrome (Cohen et al., Reference Cohen, Chinnery, Copeland, Adam, Mirzaa, Pagon, Wallace, Bean, Gripp and Amemiya1993). For this reason, sodium valproate should be avoided in patients with this particular genetic disorder. This has led many clinicians to avoid prescribing sodium valproate for all mitochondrial disorders, although clear evidence is lacking beyond POLG-related disease. Although we identified an association between common polymorphisms in POLG and unexplained drug-induced liver injury caused by sodium valproate (Stewart et al., Reference Stewart, Horvath and Baruffini2010), these findings have not been replicated and are therefore tentative.

The m.1555A>G mtDNA mutation is carried by ~1:300 of the population (Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Samuels, Eden, Relton and Chinnery2008) and has been associated with aminoglycoside-induced hearing loss (Prezant et al., Reference Prezant, Agapian and Bohlman1993; O’Sullivan et al., Reference O’Sullivan, Rutland and Lucas2015). This has led many to screen for this mutation before beginning aminoglycosides including streptomycin and gentamycin, particularly in the intensive care setting. However, population studies do not provide strong evidence of a link between this variant and sporadic hearing loss (Kullar et al., Reference Kullar, Alston and Ball2016), suggesting that this may be a particular vulnerability seen in families with maternally inherited deafness, and not in the general population at large. Functional studies suggest that a deeper understanding of the mtDNA sequence will be informative in avoiding the complications of using other antibiotics (Gomez-Duran et al., Reference Gomez-Duran, Pacheu-Grau, Lopez-Perez, Montoya and Ruiz-Pesini2011; Pacheu-Grau et al., Reference Pacheu-Grau, Gomez-Duran, Iglesias, Lopez-Gallardo, Montoya and Ruiz-Pesini2013), but clinical data are lacking at present.

Conclusions

Genomics has underpinned a diagnostic revolution enabling the precision diagnosis of rare inherited mitochondrial disorders. This underpins clinical management and is driving forward treatments, including at the molecular level. In this context, precise molecular diagnosis has a profound effect on the management of recurrence risks and disease surveillance, and thus the management of complications.

Although in its infancy, it is clear that genetic variation of mtDNA also plays an important role in determining many human physiological parameters and is a risk factor for common human diseases. Evidence linking nuclear-mitochondrial genes and common diseases are, however, limited. Precisely, how these findings feed into precision medicine strategies for common diseases have yet to emerge. Our understanding of mitochondrial pharmacogenomics is also likely to expand in coming years, given the recent evidence that canonical cell signalling pathways can be altered by genetic variants of both mtDNA, highlighting the central role of the mitochondrion in cell function. Although speculative at present, it is likely that understanding the genetic code responsible for the biogenesis of our mitochondria will influence how we use medicines in the future – to optimise treatment effects and minimise toxicity.

Open peer review

To view the open peer review materials for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/pcm.2022.8.

Acknowledgements

The views expressed are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the Department of Health and Social Care.

Financial support

P.F.C. is a Wellcome Trust Principal Research Fellow (212219/Z/18/Z), and a UK NIHR Senior Investigator, who receives support from the Medical Research Council Mitochondrial Biology Unit (MC_UU_00028/7), the Medical Research Council (MRC) International Centre for Genomic Medicine in Neuromuscular Disease (MR/S005021/1), the Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2018-408), an MRC research grant (MR/S035699/1) and an Alzheimer’s Society Project Grant (AS-PG-18b-022). This research was supported by the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre (BRC-1215-20014).

Competing interest

The author declares no competing interests.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). The 16,569 base pair human mtDNA includes an inner ‘light’ (L)-strand and an outer ‘heavy’ (H)-strand. mtDNA genes encoding structural sub-units of the mitochondrial respiratory chain include ND1–ND6 and ND4L (complex I), CYB (complex III), CO1–3 (complex IV), and ATP6 and ATP8 (complex V). The 22 tRNA and 2 rRNA genes are interspersed between the peptide-encoding genes and are essential for protein synthesis within mitochondria (amino acid letter codes). mtDNA replication is initiated by transcription within the non-coding mtDNA displacement (D) loop and proceeds from the origin of heavy-strand replication (OH, also known as OriH) until the origin of light-strand replication (OL) is exposed, allowing light-strand synthesis to proceed clockwise until the entire molecule is copied. Alternatively, symmetric strand-coupled replication might occur in certain circumstances. Source: Adapted from Nature Reviews Genetics, 16, 2015, 530–42, Springer Nature.

Figure 1

Figure 2. mtDNA heteroplasmy and the threshold effect. Recent mtDNA mutations are usually heteroplasmic. Organs, cells and probably mitochondria can contain varying proportions of mutated and wild-type mtDNA. If a mutation is pathogenic, the cell can usually tolerate a high percentage level before the biochemical threshold is exceeded and a biochemical defect develops. The level of heteroplasmy can vary between individuals within the same family, and also change during life in some tissues and organs. Source: Adapted from Nature Reviews Genetics, 16, 2015, 530–42, Springer Nature.

Figure 2

Figure 3. mtDNA genetic bottleneck. A reduction in the amount of mtDNA passed from one generation to the next leads to a statistical sampling effect and very different proportions of mutant and wild-type mtDNA in the offspring of the next generation. Source: Adapted from Nature Genetics 40, 2008, 249–54, Springer Nature.

Figure 3

Table 1. Canonical mitochondrial disease clinical syndromes

Author comment: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R0/PR1

Comments

Dear Mark,

Thank you for inviting me to submit an article on mitochondria. I hope you like it.

Best wishes

Patrick

Review: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R0/PR2

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Comments to Author: The manuscript, authored by one of the leading scientists in the mitochondrial genetics field, elegantly and comprehensively covers basic mitochondrial biology, the genetics of mitochondrial DNA and mitochondrial protein-coding nuclear DNA, and their contribution to both primary mitochondrial and common complex disorders.

Such effort is welcome as the involvement of mitochondrial DNA variants in common complex diseases, not only in primary mitochondrial disorders, have been receiving increasing attentions for the last decades.

The topic is timely and clinically relevant. Indeed, with the increasing incidence of age-related complex diseases, where mitochondria play an increasingly recognised role, precision mitochondrial medicine is one pivotal field that can ultimately have a strong impact on our ageing society.

As such, the content is of great interest not only for specialists in "mitochondrial" medicine but also for general readers of the journal. This reviewer expects the manuscript to be heavily cited by many clinicians and scientists when published.

The structure of the manuscript is logical and easy to follow. Particularly, in the second section (2. Precision diagnosis of rare mitochondrial disorders), the hurdles of diagnosing primary mitochondrial diseases due to the variable clinical presentation as well as the complexity of mitochondrial gene variants (e.g., tissue specificity and the nature of mtDNA variants) are very well organised and nicely summarised. If a graphical summary of this part is available, it will make this manuscript more distinct as a precision mitochondrial medicine resource.

One interesting section of the manuscript that can be expanded is that dealing with gene-environmental interaction. The author primarily discussed this aspect in LHON. If there are any known interactions between environmental factors and non-pathogenic mtDNA polymorphisms in common complex diseases in humans and/or experimental models, it will support the concept.

Additionally, there are minor points that can be revised:

- The mouse models described in reference 60 do not exhibit primary mitochondria disorders, while these heteroplastic mice showed metabolic disease phenotypes. Therefore, this reference my not be adequate to the statement.

- Figure 2 looks identical to a figure published in PMID: 26281784 (presented as Figure 1 in the paper). Although this was published by the author of this manuscript, it may be a copyright issue?

- Figure 3 legend is to be checked for type (the beginning of the legend). Is "a statistical sampling affect" to be replaced as "a statistical sampling effect"? If so, the respective term in the main text (Page 3, line 4) should also be changed.

- Abbreviation VAF should be explained for general readers?

Overall, this reviewer strongly recommends this manuscript for publication.

Review: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R0/PR3

Comments

Comments to Author: Doctor Chinnery have made a comprehensive review regarding the relevance of the mitochondrial precision medicine mainly from the perspective of mtDNA but with significant references to nuclear encoded genes.

I enjoyed a lot reading it, but I have few suggestions that may improve the scope and significance:

1.- There is no mention to one of the earlier association of mtDNA variants to human disease regarding Astenozoospermia

2.- The updated catalog of mitochondria proteins is being proposed to rise to 1,300 proteins rather than 1,100

3.- It would be very interesting to comment why most if not all mtDNA mutations require to be accumulated well over 50% in heteroplasmy to cause deficiency. Does it mean that no dominant mutation in mtDNA has been described to date? Is there any reason for that?

4.- Beside the bottle-neck at the oocyte formation there are evidences of mtDNA variant selection during early embryo development. This need to be commented since it is relevant for diagnosis, treatment and prognosis.

5- In pag 11, last line the quoting seems to be incorrect since the 97 reference is not related with what is described.

6.- It would be of interest if the authors include a comment on the fact that the protein content of mitochondria of different cell types is different and on the existence of nuclear encoded isoforms for OXPHOS structural subunits and its potential impact on the modulation of mtDNA or nDNA mutations.

Recommendation: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R0/PR4

Comments

Comments to Author: Dear authors,

Comprehensive review on mitochondrial diseases was carried out in this article. Using simple and clear language, the text became very didactic even discussing complex information.

Enthusiastic mentions about molecular diagnosis of mitochondrial diseases were appropriately observed across the text. However, we would like to ask the authors about two points on precision molecular diagnosis.

1. First, what is the genetic testing diagnosis yield in patients with previous clinical diagnosis of mitochondriopathy? Is there difference in genetic testing diagnosis yield between it versus in non selected (only clinical suspicious, no diagnosis clearly established) cohorts of patients with mitochondrial disease? What are the reasons for negative genetic results in patients with established clinical diagnosis of mitochondrial disease? It should be clear in the text, the genetic testing yield, and that a negative exome + mtDNA sequencing results do not rule out a clinical suspicious of mitochondrial disease.

2. Even though prenatal and pre-implantation diagnosis have been only cited in the Prevention topic, 2.5.4 section, it is a relevant information for clinical management and genetic counseling of these patients. No reference was cited here, please report it. Authors should add a sentence with the main disorders (or clinical scenarios) where these diagnostic approaches have been applied.

Further, in the 3.2.3 section, the title describing "homoplasmic mtDNA variants..." does not clearly reflect the content of this section. There is no description in this text about homoplasmic status. The title or the text should be modified to make sense.

Decision: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R0/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R1/PR6

Comments

Response to the Editor

Editor: Comprehensive review on mitochondrial diseases was carried out in this article. Using simple and clear language, the text became very didactic even discussing complex information.

Enthusiastic mentions about molecular diagnosis of mitochondrial diseases were appropriately observed across the text. However, we would like to ask the authors about two points on precision molecular diagnosis.

1. First, what is the genetic testing diagnosis yield in patients with previous clinical diagnosis of mitochondriopathy? Is there difference in genetic testing diagnosis yield between it versus in non selected (only clinical suspicious, no diagnosis clearly established) cohorts of patients with mitochondrial disease? What are the reasons for negative genetic results in patients with established clinical diagnosis of mitochondrial disease? It should be clear in the text, the genetic testing yield, and that a negative exome + mtDNA sequencing results do not rule out a clinical suspicious of mitochondrial disease.

Response: Several studies have shown that the testing yield depends on the clinical selection criteria. We have expanded on this in the revised manuscript with a new sub-section covering all of the points raised by the Editor:

P7

2.5.4 Current diagnostic yield and the implications of a negative test

Several studies have shown that the diagnostic yield of both exome and WGS depends on the how carefully individual families are selected for investigation. The yield is greater when patients fulfil established diagnostic criteria (such as the Nijmegen criteria54), particularly if this involves the biochemical confirmation of an underlying respiratory chain enzyme deficiency39,40,43,55,56. Perhaps the closest estimate of the true diagnostic yield in relatively unselected patients comes from the 100,000 Genomes Project in England, where patients with a suspect mitochondrial disorder were referred for WGS from both non-specialist and specialist centres44. It is important to note that patients were only referred after undergoing conventional genetic investigations for a mitochondrial disorder. In this study, WGS delivered a molecular diagnosis in an additional 31% of families, with the highest yield in children, and particularly when parental DNA samples were available. However, over half of the new diagnoses were not classical mitochondrial diseases, emphasising the challenge of clinically defining a mitochondrial disorder up front. As mentioned above, WGS is capable of detecting >90% of currently known genetic causes of mitochondrial disease. Putting this information together, WGS has the potential to diagnose the vast majority of known mitochondrial diseases, approaching ~95% of referrals from secondary (hospital) care. However, it is important to note that patients with a positive genetic diagnosis do not fulfil clinical diagnostic criteria, and not all have a detectable biochemical abnormality, so it would be inappropriate to exclude patients from the opportunity to undergo exome or WGS in the absence of a classical clinical presentation.

There are several reasons why genetic testing can negative in mitochondrial disorders: (i) for a mtDNA mutation, the level of heteroplasmy may be undetectable in the tested tissue (eg mtDNA deletions may not be detected in blood DNA, but reach high levels in skeletal muscle causing disease); (ii) the underlying causal nuclear gene may not been discovered yet; (iii) structural variants may be missed using current diagnostic and bioinformatic pipelines; and, (iv) detected variants may be difficult to interpret, perhaps lying in deep intronic regions. Thus, negative genetic testing does not exclude the diagnosis of a mitochondrial disorder.

Editor: 2. Even though prenatal and pre-implantation diagnosis have been only cited in the Prevention topic, 2.5.4 section, it is a relevant information for clinical management and genetic counseling of these patients. No reference was cited here, please report it. Authors should add a sentence with the main disorders (or clinical scenarios) where these diagnostic approaches have been applied.

Response: We are pleased to make the changes proposed as follows, citing the relevant literature:

P8

For mtDNA mutations there is the added opportunity of mitochondrial transfer to prevent transmission58-60,61, which has been successfully used to prevent Leigh syndrome62.

Editor: Further, in the 3.2.3 section, the title describing "homoplasmic mtDNA variants..." does not clearly reflect the content of this section. There is no description in this text about homoplasmic status. The title or the text should be modified to make sense.

Response: We have changed the title to:

P10

Preliminary evidence that mtDNA haplogroups affect common disease risk.

Reviewer: 1

Reviewer: The manuscript, authored by one of the leading scientists in the mitochondrial genetics field, elegantly and comprehensively covers basic mitochondrial biology, the genetics of mitochondrial DNA and mitochondrial protein-coding nuclear DNA, and their contribution to both primary mitochondrial and common complex disorders.

Such effort is welcome as the involvement of mitochondrial DNA variants in common complex diseases, not only in primary mitochondrial disorders, have been receiving increasing attentions for the last decades.

The topic is timely and clinically relevant. Indeed, with the increasing incidence of age-related complex diseases, where mitochondria play an increasingly recognised role, precision mitochondrial medicine is one pivotal field that can ultimately have a strong impact on our ageing society.

As such, the content is of great interest not only for specialists in "mitochondrial" medicine but also for general readers of the journal. This reviewer expects the manuscript to be heavily cited by many clinicians and scientists when published.

The structure of the manuscript is logical and easy to follow. Particularly, in the second section (2. Precision diagnosis of rare mitochondrial disorders), the hurdles of diagnosing primary mitochondrial diseases due to the variable clinical presentation as well as the complexity of mitochondrial gene variants (e.g., tissue specificity and the nature of mtDNA variants) are very well organised and nicely summarised. If a graphical summary of this part is available, it will make this manuscript more distinct as a precision mitochondrial medicine resource.

One interesting section of the manuscript that can be expanded is that dealing with gene-environmental interaction. The author primarily discussed this aspect in LHON. If there are any known interactions between environmental factors and non-pathogenic mtDNA polymorphisms in common complex diseases in humans and/or experimental models, it will support the concept.

Response: The other example of a gene-environment interaction is aminoglycoside induced deafness in people who carry the m.1555A>G variant. This was included in the section on pharmacogenomics. The author is not aware of any other convincing examples of mtDNA-environment interactions.

Reviewer: Additionally, there are minor points that can be revised:

- The mouse models described in reference 60 do not exhibit primary mitochondria disorders, while these heteroplastic mice showed metabolic disease phenotypes. Therefore, this reference my not be adequate to the statement.

Response: We have deleted the citation and revised the section as follows

P8

Animal models with specific primary mitochondrial disorders share some of these phenotypes including features of premature ageing67.

Reviewer: - Figure 2 looks identical to a figure published in PMID: 26281784 (presented as Figure 1 in the paper). Although this was published by the author of this manuscript, it may be a copyright issue?

Response: The reviewer is correct. I was under the impression that the Journal would re-draft these figures. If not, I will seek permission to reproduce them.

Reviewer: - Figure 3 legend is to be checked for type (the beginning of the legend). Is "a statistical sampling affect" to be replaced as "a statistical sampling effect"? If so, the respective term in the main text (Page 3, line 4) should also be changed.

Response: We thank the reviewer for spotting this typo. The revised legend is as follows:

P20

A reduction in the amount of mtDNA passed from one generation to the next leads to a statistical sampling effect and very different proportions of mutant and wild-type mtDNA in the offspring of the next generation.

Reviewer: - Abbreviation VAF should be explained for general readers?

Response: We have defined VAF when the abbreviation is first used (P6)

Reviewer: 2

Reviewer: Doctor Chinnery have made a comprehensive review regarding the relevance of the mitochondrial precision medicine mainly from the perspective of mtDNA but with significant references to nuclear encoded genes. I enjoyed a lot reading it, but I have few suggestions that may improve the scope and significance:

1.- There is no mention to one of the earlier association of mtDNA variants to human disease regarding Astenozoospermia

Response: We have added astenozoospermia and the original citation to the relevant section on P10

Reviewer: 2.- The updated catalog of mitochondria proteins is being proposed to rise to 1,300 proteins rather than 1,100

Response: We have corrected this typo on page 2

Reviewer: 3.- It would be very interesting to comment why most if not all mtDNA mutations require to be accumulated well over 50% in heteroplasmy to cause deficiency. Does it mean that no dominant mutation in mtDNA has been described to date? Is there any reason for that?

Response: We are pleased to expand on this interesting point as follows:

P2

For some mtDNA mutations, the absolute amount of wild-type mtDNA appears to determine whether a cell expresses a biochemical defect (ie the mutations is haplo-insufficient), but this is not the case for others, where very a very high percentage level of the mutation is required to have an effect11. Very high thresholds probably reflect functional complementation by the residual wild-type molecules, which is only compromised when the proportion of mutant mtDNA is extremely high and wild-type levels correspondingly very low12,13.

Reviewer: 4.- Beside the bottle-neck at the oocyte formation there are evidences of mtDNA variant selection during early embryo development. This need to be commented since it is relevant for diagnosis, treatment and prognosis.

Response: We had added the following sentence with citations to address the reviewer’s point.

P3

Similar genetic bottlenecks also occur probably in somatic tissues contributing to different levels of heteroplasmy in different tissues18,23-25.

Reviewer: 5- In pag 11, last line the quoting seems to be incorrect since the 97 reference is not related with what is described.

Response: We thank the reviewer for spotting this error. We have corrected the sentence and citations as follows:

P12

These findings are supported by mouse models where mtDNA heteroplasmy can contribute to premature ageing73,110.

Reviewer: 6.- It would be of interest if the authors include a comment on the fact that the protein content of mitochondria of different cell types is different and on the existence of nuclear encoded isoforms for OXPHOS structural subunits and its potential impact on the modulation of mtDNA or nDNA mutations.

Response: We are pleased to expand on this point as follows:

P4

Several mechanisms have been proposed to explain tissue selectivity and clinical heterogeneity, including differences in the burden of mtDNA mutations between tissues and organs (heteroplasmy, see below), and the existence of different tissue-specific isoforms of

Review: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R1/PR7

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Comments to Author: The authors has satisfied all my suggestions

Review: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R1/PR8

Conflict of interest statement

Reviewer declares none.

Comments

Comments to Author: This author thanks the author for responding to the suggestions.

Recommendation: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R1/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Precision mitochondrial medicine — R1/PR10

Comments

No accompanying comment.