Disease-Causing Mitochondrial Heteroplasmy Segregated Within Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Clones Derived from a Patient with MELAS

Author:

Folmes Clifford D.L.12,Martinez-Fernandez Almudena12,Perales-Clemente Ester12,Li Xing32,Mcdonald Amber4,Oglesbee Devin4,Hrstka Sybil C.25,Perez-Terzic Carmen126,Terzic Andre1728,Nelson Timothy J.7259

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

2. Center for Regenerative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

3. Department of Health Sciences Research, Division of Biomedical Statistics and Informatics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

4. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

5. Department of Medicine, Division of General Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

6. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

7. Department of Molecular Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

8. Department of Medical Genetics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA

9. Transplant Center, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

Abstract

Abstract Mitochondrial diseases display pathological phenotypes according to the mixture of mutant versus wild-type mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), known as heteroplasmy. We herein examined the impact of nuclear reprogramming and clonal isolation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) on mitochondrial heteroplasmy. Patient-derived dermal fibroblasts with a prototypical mitochondrial deficiency diagnosed as mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) demonstrated mitochondrial dysfunction with reduced oxidative reserve due to heteroplasmy at position G13513A in the ND5 subunit of complex I. Bioengineered iPSC clones acquired pluripotency with multilineage differentiation capacity and demonstrated reduction in mitochondrial density and oxygen consumption distinguishing them from the somatic source. Consistent with the cellular mosaicism of the original patient-derived fibroblasts, the MELAS-iPSC clones contained a similar range of mtDNA heteroplasmy of the disease-causing mutation with identical profiles in the remaining mtDNA. High-heteroplasmy iPSC clones were used to demonstrate that extended stem cell passaging was sufficient to purge mutant mtDNA, resulting in isogenic iPSC subclones with various degrees of disease-causing genotypes. On comparative differentiation of iPSC clones, improved cardiogenic yield was associated with iPSC clones containing lower heteroplasmy compared with isogenic clones with high heteroplasmy. Thus, mtDNA heteroplasmic segregation within patient-derived stem cell lines enables direct comparison of genotype/phenotype relationships in progenitor cells and lineage-restricted progeny, and indicates that cell fate decisions are regulated as a function of mtDNA mutation load. The novel nuclear reprogramming-based model system introduces a disease-in-a-dish tool to examine the impact of mutant genotypes for MELAS patients in bioengineered tissues and a cellular probe for molecular features of individual mitochondrial diseases.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research Fellowship

Mayo Clinic Center for Regenerative Medicine Fellowship

Marriott Individualized Medicine Career Development Award

American Heart Association Midwest Affiliate Postdoctoral Fellowship

Spanish Ministry of Education MEC

Todd and Karen Wanek Family Program for Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome

NIH New Innovator

Marriott Heart Disease Research Program and the Leducq Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Medicine

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