AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore the connection between mitochondrial genetic factors and susceptibility to gout among Māori and Pacific people in New Zealand, focusing on mitochondrial DNA variation and copy number.
  • Researchers sequenced the mitochondrial genomes of 437 individuals, finding low genetic diversity and a specific haplogroup associated with increased gout risk, while higher mitochondrial DNA copy numbers were linked to reduced risk.
  • Interestingly, despite protection against gout, increased mitochondrial DNA copies correlated with more frequent gout flares in affected individuals, indicating a complex relationship between mitochondrial factors and gout symptoms.

Article Abstract

Objective: Mitochondria have an important role in the induction of the NLRP3 inflammasome response central in gout. The objective was to test whether mitochondrial genetic variation and copy number in New Zealand Māori and Pacific (Polynesian) people in Aotearoa New Zealand associate with susceptibility to gout.

Methods: 437 whole mitochondrial genomes from Māori and Pacific people (predominantly men) from Aotearoa New Zealand (327 people with gout, 110 without gout) were sequenced. Mitochondrial DNA copy number variation was determined by assessing relative read depth using data produced from whole genome sequencing (32 cases, 43 controls) and targeted resequencing of urate loci (151 cases, 222 controls). Quantitative PCR was undertaken for replication of copy number findings in an extended sample set of 1159 Māori and Pacific men and women (612 cases, 547 controls).

Results: There was relatively little mitochondrial genetic diversity, with around 96% of those sequenced in this study belonging to the B4a1a and derived sublineages. A B haplogroup heteroplasmy in hypervariable region I was found to associate with a higher risk of gout among the mitochondrial sequenced sample set (position 16181: OR=1.57, P0.001). Increased copies of mitochondrial DNA were found to protect against gout risk with the effect being consistent when using hyperuricaemic controls across each of the three independent sample sets (OR=0.89, P=0.007; OR=0.90, P=0.002; OR=0.76, P0.03). Paradoxically, an increase of mitochondrial DNA also associated with an increase in gout flare frequency in people with gout in the two larger sample sets used for the copy number analysis (β=0.003, P=7.1×10; β=0.08, P=1.2×10).

Conclusion: Association of reduced copy number with gout in hyperuricaemia was replicated over three Polynesian sample sets. Our data are consistent with emerging research showing that mitochondria are important for the colocalisation of the NLRP3 and ASC inflammasome subunits, a process essential for the generation of interleukin-1β in gout.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/annrheumdis-2017-212416DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

copy number
20
māori pacific
16
mitochondrial genetic
12
aotearoa zealand
12
mitochondrial dna
12
sample sets
12
gout
10
mitochondrial
8
genetic variation
8
pacific people
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!