Mitochondrial DNA Changes and Migration to the Nucleus

Certainty Style Key
Hover over keys for definitions:
True   Likely   Speculative
Human Uniqueness Compared to "Great Apes": 
Likely Difference
MOCA Domain: 
Genomics

Mitochondria are organelles located with the eukaryotic cell that are involved in energy production, and are thought to originate from bacteria ancestrally engulfed by eukaryotic cells. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is circular, transcribed separately from nuclear DNA, and has a comparatively high mutation rate (10 times or more higher than nuclear DNA in mammals). One consequence is co-evolution of nuclear- and mtDNA-encoded electron transport chain genes, preventing nuclear transfer between many primates and possibly compromising nuclear transplantation within human lineages. It is inherited maternally in the majority of eukaryotes, and analyses of mtDNA are used to probe phylogeny among closely related species and lineages within humans. Humans have elevated mtDNA transition (but not transversion) mutation rates compared to other primates examined. mtDNA has inserted into the nucleus and become incorporated into nuclear genomic DNA at multiple points during eukaryotic evolution, and these mitochondrial pseudogenes in the nuclear genome (NUMTs) have duplicated further in primates in the setting of nuclear segmental duplications. Multiple original mtDNA insertions and NUMT duplications are unique to the human lineage and 27 NUMTs have been identified that are human-specific.

Related MOCA Topics
The Human Difference: 

Accelerate rate of transitions

Novel NUMTs

References: 

Ricchetti M, Tekala F and Dujon B (2004). Continued colonization of the human genome by mitochondrial DNA. PLoS Biology 2(9):e273.

Bensasson D, Feldman MW and Petrov DA (2003). Rates of DNA duplication and mitochondrial DNA insertion in the human genome. J Mol Evol 57:343-354.

Adachi J and Hasegawa M (1996). Tempo and mode of synonymous substitutions in mitochondrial DNA of primates. Mol Biol Evol 13(1):200-208.

Kenyon L, Moraes CT (1997). Expanding the functional human mitochondrial DNA database by the establishment of primate xenomitochondrial cybrids. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 94: 9131-9135.