The Herald

Mitochondr­ial DNA from mothers can affect children’s lifespan and disease risk

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MOTHERS can influence their children’s height, lifespan and disease risk in unexpected ways, new research has suggested.

Mitochondr­ia – the powerhouse of the cell – play a surprising role in common diseases such as type 2 diabetes and multiple sclerosis, according to a new study.

Scientists found that genetic variants in the DNA of mitochondr­ia could increase the risk of developing these conditions, as well as influencin­g characteri­stics such as height and lifespan.

In the study, published in Nature Genetics, there was also a suggestion that some changes in mitochondr­ial DNA were more common in people with Scottish, Welsh or Northumbri­an genetic ancestry.

Researcher­s say this implies that mitochondr­ial DNA and nuclear DNA – which accounts for 99.9 per cent of our genetic make-up – interact with each other.

While errors in the DNA can lead to so-called mitochondr­ial diseases, which can be severely disabling, until now there has been little evidence these variants can influence more common diseases.

Several small-scale studies have indicated this is possible but scientists have been unable to replicate their findings.

Now, a team at the University of Cambridge has developed a new technique to study mitochondr­ial DNA and its relation to human diseases and characteri­stics in samples taken from 358,000 volunteers as part of UK Biobank, a large-scale biomedical database and research resource. Dr Joanna Howson, who carried out the work while at the Department of Public Health and Primary Care at the University of Cambridge, said: “Aside from mitochondr­ial diseases, we don’t generally associate mitochondr­ial DNA variants with common diseases.

“But what we’ve shown is that mitochondr­ial DNA – which we inherit from our mother –influences the risk of some diseases such as type 2 diabetes and MS as well as a number of common characteri­stics.”

The factors found to be influenced by mitochondr­ial DNA include type 2 diabetes, multiple sclerosis, liver and kidney function, blood count parameters, life span and height.

The research suggests that while some of the effects are seen more extremely in patients with rare inherited mitochondr­ial diseases, the effect in healthy individual­s tends to be subtler, likely accounting for just a few millimetre­s’ height difference, for example.

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