Abstract
There are certain de novo germline mutations associated with genetic disorders whose mutation rates per generation are orders of magnitude higher than the genome average. Moreover, these mutations occur exclusively in the male germ line and older men have a higher probability of having an affected child than younger ones, known as the paternal age effect (PAE). The classic example of a genetic disorder exhibiting a PAE is achondroplasia, caused predominantly by a single-nucleotide substitution (c.1138G>A) in FGFR3. To elucidate what mechanisms might be driving the high frequency of this mutation in the male germline, we examined the spatial distribution of the c.1138G>A substitution in a testis from an 80-year-old unaffected man. Using a technology based on bead-emulsion amplification, we were able to measure mutation frequencies in 192 individual pieces of the dissected testis with a false-positive rate lower than 2.7 × 10-6. We observed that most mutations are clustered in a few pieces with 95% of all mutations occurring in 27% of the total testis. Using computational simulations, we rejected the model proposing an elevated mutation rate per cell division at this nucleotide site. Instead, we determined that the observed mutation distribution fits a germline selection model, where mutant spermatogonial stem cells have a proliferative advantage over unmutated cells. Combined with data on several other PAE mutations, our results support the idea that the PAE, associated with a number of Mendelian disorders, may be explained primarily by a selective mechanism.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | ddt260 |
| Pages (from-to) | 4117-26 |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Journal | Human Molecular Genetics |
| Volume | 22 |
| Issue number | 20 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Oct 2013 |
Fields of science
- 103036 Theoretical physics
- 211904 Biomechanics
- 103020 Surface physics
- 210 Nanotechnology
- 104010 Macromolecular chemistry
- 106006 Biophysics
- 106022 Microbiology
- 106048 Animal physiology
- 209 Industrial Biotechnology
- 304 Medical Biotechnology
- 404 Agricultural Biotechnology, Food Biotechnology
- 106049 Ultrastructure research
- 103021 Optics
- 106002 Biochemistry
- 104017 Physical chemistry
- 208 Environmental Biotechnology
- 104014 Surface chemistry
- 106023 Molecular biology
- 107 Other Natural Sciences
- 301110 Physiology
- 301206 Pharmacology
- 206 Medical Engineering
- 301306 Medical molecular biology
- 302044 Medical physics
- 301902 Immunology
- 305910 Traffic medicine
JKU Focus areas
- Engineering and Natural Sciences (in general)