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In vivo mutagenesis reveals that OriL is essential for mitochondrial DNA replication.


ABSTRACT: The mechanisms of mitochondrial DNA replication have been hotly debated for a decade. The strand-displacement model states that lagging-strand DNA synthesis is initiated from the origin of light-strand DNA replication (OriL), whereas the strand-coupled model implies that OriL is dispensable. Mammalian mitochondria cannot be transfected and the requirements of OriL in vivo have therefore not been addressed. We here use in vivo saturation mutagenesis to demonstrate that OriL is essential for mtDNA maintenance in the mouse. Biochemical and bioinformatic analyses show that OriL is functionally conserved in vertebrates. Our findings strongly support the strand-displacement model for mtDNA replication.

SUBMITTER: Wanrooij S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3513414 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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In vivo mutagenesis reveals that OriL is essential for mitochondrial DNA replication.

Wanrooij Sjoerd S   Miralles Fusté Javier J   Stewart James B JB   Wanrooij Paulina H PH   Samuelsson Tore T   Larsson Nils-Göran NG   Gustafsson Claes M CM   Falkenberg Maria M  

EMBO reports 20121023 12


The mechanisms of mitochondrial DNA replication have been hotly debated for a decade. The strand-displacement model states that lagging-strand DNA synthesis is initiated from the origin of light-strand DNA replication (OriL), whereas the strand-coupled model implies that OriL is dispensable. Mammalian mitochondria cannot be transfected and the requirements of OriL in vivo have therefore not been addressed. We here use in vivo saturation mutagenesis to demonstrate that OriL is essential for mtDNA  ...[more]

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