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Mutation Patterns of Mitochondrial H- and L-Strand DNA in Closely Related Cyprinid Fishes
Joseph P. Bielawskia,b and John R. Goldaa Center for Biosystematics and Biodiversity, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77843-2258
b Department of Biology, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom
Corresponding author: Joseph P. Bielawski, University College London, Darwin Bldg., Gower St., London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom., j.bielawski{at}ucl.ac.uk (E-mail)
Communicating editor: H. OCHMAN
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
Mitochondrial genome replication is asymmetric. Replication starts from the origin of heavy (H)-strand replication, displacing the parental H-strand as it proceeds along the molecule. The H-strand remains single stranded until light (L)-strand replication is initiated from a second origin of replication. It has been suggested that single-stranded H-strand DNA is more sensitive to mutational damage, giving rise to substitutional rate differences between the two strands and among genes in mammalian mitochondrial DNA. In this study, we analyzed sequences of the cytochrome b, ND4, ND4L, and COI genes of cyprinid fishes to investigate rates and patterns of nucleotide substitution in the mitochondrial genome. To test for strand-asymmetric mutation pressure, a likelihood-ratio test was developed and applied to the cyprinid sequences. Patterns of substitution and levels of strand-asymmetric mutation pressure were largely consistent with a mutation gradient between the H- and L-strand origins of replication. Significant strand bias was observed among rates of transitional substitution. However, biological interpretation of the direction and strength of strand asymmetry for specific classes of substitutions is problematic. The problem occurs because the rate of any single class of substitution inferred from one strand is actually a sum of rates on two strands. The validity of the likelihood-ratio test is not affected by this problem.
INDIVIDUAL strands of double-stranded mitochondrial (mt)DNA molecules are distinguished by their buoyant density in a cesium chloride gradient as heavy (H-strand) vs. light (L-strand). This difference is a function of uneven nucleotide content of the two strands; the H-strand is guanine rich, whereas the L-strand is guanine poor. The strongest strand-specific biases are found at fourfold degenerate sites (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
The mode of mitochondrial replication has been hypothesized to be responsible for the high mutation rate of mtDNA relative to that of the nuclear genome (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
11 kb downstream from OriH. A presumed consequence of this mode of replication is a period of time in which a portion of the parental H-strand is single stranded. The process of mtDNA replication is slow, taking as much as 2 hr to replicate the genome completely (CLAYTON 1992). During this time, H-strand DNA could be exposed to greater mutational damage via one or more of the following: (i) hydrolytic deamination of cytosine, (ii) hydrolytic deamination of adenine, and (iii) oxidation of guanine (![]()
![]()
If mutational damage to single-stranded H-strand DNA is significant, substitution rates should differ between H-strand and L-strand mtDNA (![]()
![]()
Tests of these predictions in various animal taxa have yielded conflicting results. ![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
The objective of this study was to utilize a phylogenetic framework to investigate the hypothesis of ![]()
![]()
![]()
1 kb from OriH]; (ii) intermediate between OriH and OriL (the ND4 gene and ND4L gene,
5.5 kb from OriH); and (iii) close to OriL [the cytochrome oxidase I gene (COI),
10 kb from OriH].
DNA sequences were used to test the following null hypotheses: (i) substitution rate of a gene is independent of distance from OriH, and (ii) substitution rates are homogeneous between H- and L-strands of mtDNA. Tests of the first null hypothesis were based on maximum-likelihood estimates of synonymous rates and rates at fourfold degenerate sites. To test the second null hypothesis, a likelihood-ratio test for strand asymmetry was developed and applied to three different classes of substitutions. Results are consistent with the hypothesis that the mode of mitochondrial genome replication influences the mutational process of cyprinid DNA, with the pattern of substitution differing among genes and among H- and L-strands of the genome.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Taxon and character sampling:
Taxa examined in this study included seven species of the North American cyprinid genus Notropis: six of the species (Notropis amabilis, N. atherinoides, N. photogenis, N. scepticus, N. stilbius, and N. suttkusi) are members of the subgenus Notropis, while one species (N. potteri) belongs to the subgenus Alburnops (![]()
![]()
![]()
DNA extraction, amplification, and sequencing:
Whole fish were ground in liquid nitrogen, and DNA was obtained by phenol:chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation (![]()
![]()
![]()
Testing the mutational gradient between OriH and OriL:
Data analysis focused on either synonymous sites or third positions of fourfold degenerate codons (i.e., fourfold degenerate sites) because mutations at those sites are assumed to be unaffected by natural selection acting on amino acid sequence. The phylogenetic hypothesis derived from previous analyses of mtDNA sequence data (Fig 1; ![]()
|
The mean number of synonymous substitutions per synonymous site was estimated by using the topology-dependent maximum-likelihood method of ![]()
![]()
![]()
The mean number of substitutions per fourfold degenerate site also was estimated for each branch of the assumed topology by using an optimal nucleotide-substitution model (see Appendix). Maximum-likelihood analyses were carried out using the baseml program of PAML (![]()
Repeated measures ANOVA, along with the posttest for linear trend, was performed by using GraphPad InStat v 3.01 (GraphPad Software, San Diego). In this case, the posttest determines whether the substitution rates increase (or decrease) systematically as the columns go from left to right. Analyses were conducted on both fourfold rates and synonymous rates to evaluate the robustness of results to these different approaches to estimating the silent rate.
DNA substitution models and testing asymmetry of the mutation process:
Time-reversible models of DNA evolution place a restriction on the structure of the rate matrix, Q, such that all substitutions are "reversible"; e.g., the expected number of C
T substitutions is assumed to be equal to the expected number of T
C substitutions on the same strand (i.e.,
). The most general form of the reversible models, the general time reversible (GTR) model, was introduced by ![]()

Here, af are "rate parameters," the
i's are the nucleotide frequency parameters, and the nucleotides are ordered T, C, A, G. For a more detailed discussion see ![]()
. Although flexible, the GTR forces strand-asymmetric rates.
![]()

This model has five free parameters. Because this model is not necessarily reversible, likelihood calculations should be conducted on a rooted tree. The notion of a strand-symmetric model of evolution was first introduced by ![]()
The strand-symmetric model serves as the null model (M0) for likelihood-ratio tests (LRTs) of the hypothesis that substitution rates differ between the two strands of DNA. Let us take one set of substitutions, C to T on the H- and L-strands, as an example. First, note that a C to T transition on the H-strand (CH
TH) corresponds to a G to A transition on the L-strand (GL
AL), and a C to T transition on the L-strand (CL
TL) corresponds to a G to A transition on the H-strand (GH
AH). These substitutions are called "complementary" substitutions. If the DNA sequences are L-strand, complementary substitutions are modeled with the same parameter,
, under M0. This is true even if the rate of C
T
G
A. This is because the rate of, say, CL
TL is an average over all sites, some of which had CL
TL changes, and others had GH
AH changes. Because of this averaging, rates of C
T and G
A estimated from any one strand will be equal if each type of substitution occurs at the same rate in both strands of DNA. Only when substitution rates are strand asymmetric will the rates of complementary substitutions differ. Hence, the alternative hypothesis can be modeled by specifying a separate rate parameter for GL
AL and CL
TL. A LRT of M0 against such an alternative model is compared to a
2 distribution with 1 d.f. If significant, substitution rates must differ between the two DNA strands.
Strand asymmetry consistent with deamination of cytosine was investigated in the following way. The deamination product of cytosine is uracil (![]()
TH) and a purine transition on the L-strand (GL
AL). Complementary substitutions are GH
AH and CL
TL, respectively. Hence, if the rate of G
A is strand symmetric, but the rate of C
T is greater on the H-strand due to an increased rate of cytosine deamination (![]()
TL and GL
AL (M1).
In a similar way, strand asymmetry consistent with deamination of adenine also was investigated. The deamination product of adenine is hypoxanthine (![]()
GH) and a pyrimidine transition on the L-strand (TL
CL). Complementary substitutions are TH
CH and AL
GL, respectively. Strand asymmetry was tested for this set of complementary substitutions by a LRT of M0 against a model permitting independent rates for AL
GL and TL
CL (M2).
The primary mutagenic interaction of oxygen radicals with DNA is formation of a hydroxyl radical adduct of guanine, 8-hydroxyguanine (![]()
TH) and a C to A transversion on the L-strand (CL
AL). Complementary substitutions are CH
AH and GL
TL, respectively. Strand asymmetry was tested by a LRT of M0 against a model permitting independent rates for GL
TL and CL
AL (M3).
The above models were applied to the fourfold degenerate sites of cyt b, ND4-ND4L, and COI of the species of Notropis. For comparison, the same models also were applied to the primate 
-globin pseudogene dataset of ![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
Testing the mutational gradient between OriH and OriL:
Two different measures of silent substitution (synonymous rates and rates at fourfold degenerate sites) were used to test the expectation of a mutational gradient between OriH and OriL. The pattern expected to arise if the H-strand is preferentially subjected to decay while in the displaced single-strand state (cyt b > ND4-ND4L > COI) was observed in both measures (Fig 2). Repeated-measures ANOVA also revealed significant heterogeneity among genes in both synonymous rate (F = 4.63, P = 0.022) and the rate at fourfold degenerate sites (F = 4.45, P = 0.025). Finally, posttests for a linear trend were significant for both measures of substitution rate (synonymous rates, slope = -0.144, P = 0.008; fourfold rates, slope = -0.224, P = 0.007), suggesting an inverse relationship between distance from OriH and substitution rate.
|
Testing strand asymmetry of the mutation process:
L-strand sequences of cyt b, ND4-ND4L, and COI were analyzed under the null model of strand-symmetric substitution rates, M0, and three alternative models (M1, M2, and M3; Table 1). M1 permitted estimates of strand-asymmetric rates for complementary substitutions GL
AL and CL
TL. LRTs of M0 against M1 indicated significant strand asymmetry in all three sets of sequences, i.e., cyt b, ND4-DN4L, and COI (Table 1). M2 permitted estimates of strand-asymmetric rates for complementary substitutions AL
GL and TL
CL. LRTs of M0 against M2 also were significant for all three sets of sequences, but evidence was not strong for COI as P = 0.05 (Table 1). M3 permitted estimates of strand-asymmetric rates for the complementary transversions GL
TL and CL
AL. LRTs of M0 against M3 revealed a different pattern from LRTs of M0 against either M1 or M2 (Table 1). Strand symmetry was strongly rejected for ND4-ND4L, but not for cyt b and COI. This result suggests a unique pattern of evolution in ND4-ND4L.
|
Because all three sequences exhibited significant strand asymmetry for the complementary pairs GL
AL/CL
TL and AL
GL/TL
CL, we estimated the ratio of their expected substitution rates across the assumed phylogeny (Table 2). Estimates were based on the unrestricted model of ![]()
|
We also examined strand asymmetry in the 
-globin pseudogene. In contrast to the mitochondrial genes, there was no significant deviation for strand-symmetric substitution rates (Table 1). Moreover, complementary substitution rates estimated from the unrestricted model of ![]()
In addition to overall rates, the pattern of substitution at fourfold degenerate sites appeared to be related to distance from OriH. Both the magnitude of transitional strand asymmetry, as measured by 2
(Table 1), and the amount of among-sites rate variation, as measured by the shape parameter (
) of the Gamma distribution
, varied among the mitochondrial genes. The amount of transitional asymmetry appeared to decrease with increasing distance from OriH, while rates at sites appeared to become more homogenous with distance from OriH.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
Rates measured at either synonymous sites or fourfold sites showed a statistically significant relationship with distance from OriH. Although very similar, estimates at fourfold sites were slightly lower than those at synonymous sites. This difference might be due to differences in modeling the processes of nucleotide and codon substitution. Specifically, nucleotide sites within a codon cannot evolve independently of one another, and nucleotide models assume independence among nucleotide sites, whereas codon models consider the probability of change from codon to codon. Regardless of method, patterns were consistent with the mutation-rate gradient hypothesis (![]()
![]()
In addition to overall rate, the pattern of DNA substitution was generally consistent with a gradient between OriH and OriL. In particular, levels of transitional asymmetry appeared to decrease as distance from OriH increases. Even if hypotheses about the specific mutational mechanisms are incorrect, the pattern observed suggests a relationship between the presumed duration that the H-strand remains in a single stranded state and the process of mtDNA evolution in these cyprinids. However, sampling of the genome in this study was limited to only three regions, and an analysis of complete mitochondrial genomes will be needed to further investigate the apparent relationship between asymmetric substitution and genome location. Nevertheless, our current results, taken together with those of ![]()
On the basis of laboratory assays (![]()
T transition on the H-strand as compared to the L-strand. Our analysis of complementary substitutions C
T and G
A indicated significant asymmetry in substitution rates on the mitochondrial H- and L-strands. Furthermore, the direction of strand bias is consistent with an increased sensitivity of H-strand DNA to spontaneous decay via hydrolytic deamination of cytosine, as the estimated rate of GL
AL (CH
TH) was consistently higher than that of CL
TL. Similar inferences for mammalian mtDNA were made by ![]()
![]()
Previous observations in mammalian mtDNA sequences (![]()
![]()
G transition on the H-strand. Although our analysis of the complementary substitutions A
G and T
C indicated significant asymmetry in substitution rates, the direction of the bias was not consistent with an elevated rate of A
G on the H-strand, as the estimated rate of TL
CL (AH
GH) was consistently lower than that of AL
GL. Interestingly, it has been shown in laboratory assays that the rate of adenine deamination on single-stranded DNA is orders of magnitude lower than the rate of cytosine deamination (![]()
The mitochondrial electron transport chain is arguably the largest intracellular source of reactive oxygen species (![]()
![]()
T transversion. If the H-strand has increased sensitivity to oxidation while in the single-stranded state, the rate of CL
AL (GH
TH) should be higher than the rate of GL
TL. Our findings do not support the prediction of a consistently higher rate of G
T transversion on the mitochondrial H-strand of cyprinids. Although the genes and proteins involved in mtDNA repair are not yet well characterized, it is apparent from a diversity of studies that mitochondria have the capability to repair oxidative DNA damage (![]()
![]()
It is important to point out that for each of the examined sets of complementary substitutions, biological interpretation of the ratio of complementary rates must be treated with caution. For example, the finding of strong asymmetries opposite of those expected under hydrolytic deamination of adenine should not be taken as strong evidence against its contribution to mitochondrial DNA evolution. Each rate in the ratio is actually the sum of two rates. For instance, the rate qTC estimated from the L-strand is the sum of the following two rates: (i) qTC on the L-strand (q[L]TC), and (ii) qAG on the H-strand (q[H]AG). In the case of hydrolytic deamination of adenine, what we want to measure is q[H]AG/q[L]AG, but the ratio of complementary substitutions is actually
. The behavior of the ratio of complementary substitutions will be difficult to predict because different classes of substitution are likely to be affected differently by the processes of mutation and repair. Interpreting the LRT is not a problem, as it is based on the null hypothesis that
and
. However, the LRTs do not provide a measure of the direction of strand asymmetry.
Because the approach used in this article is new, it was necessary to further evaluate its performance. For comparison, we analyzed sequences evolving under an independent evolutionary process, the primate 
-globin pseudogene of the ß-globin complex. Patterns of evolution in these sequences exhibited an interesting contrast to cyprinid mtDNA. Both LRTs and ratios of complementary substitution rates indicated a strand-symmetric substitution process. Interestingly, previous investigations of asymmetries in intergenic sequences of the ß-globin complex generally support the notion that there are no mutational strand biases in those sequences (![]()
![]()
![]()
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
Valuable discussions were contributed by Katherine A. Dunn, John Rice, Thomas F. Turner, and Ziheng Yang. We thank James N. Derr, Rodney L. Honeycutt, and Kirk O. Weinmiller for constructive comments on an early draft of this manuscript. We especially thank Diane Rowe for valuable assistance in a variety of areas. We are very grateful to Ziheng Yang for modifying the code of PAML to accept user-defined substitution matrices and for comments that substantially improved this manuscript. This article also was improved by the suggestions of two anonymous reviewers. Research was supported in part by a National Science Foundation doctoral dissertation improvement grant (DEB-9700717), in part by a Thomas Slick research fellowship (Texas A&M University), and in part by the Texas Agricultural Experimental Station under Project H-6703. J.P.B. was partially supported by a Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (United Kingdom) research grant (31/G10434). This article represents contribution no. 100 of the Center for Biosystematics and Biodiversity at Texas A&M University.
Manuscript received January 14, 2002; Accepted for publication April 19, 2002.
| APPENDIX |
|---|
Testing models of DNA substitution:
Below we evaluate codon models and nucleotide models (at fourfold sites) for the purpose of identifying the optimal sets of model parameters for estimating and comparing silent substitution rates in cyt b, ND4-ND4L, and COI of cyprinids. To accomplish this goal, the likelihood-ratio test was utilized to evaluate the contribution of parameters that differed between two nested models (![]()
) is a measure of the increase in likelihood provided by the more complex of the two models. The chi-square distribution was used to evaluate significance of the gain in likelihood associated with use of a more complex model (![]()
Models of codon substitution:
A hierarchy of codon substitution models was constructed on the basis of parameters accounting for transition/transversion bias, codon frequencies, and among-sites rate variation (![]()
. Models of codon frequencies were (i) equal codon frequencies (1/61) and (ii) empirical codon frequencies (F61). Models of among-sites rate variation were (i) equal rates among sites and (ii) variable rates among sites, modeled using a discrete approximation to the Gamma distribution (Gamma model; ![]()
LRTs (Table A11) indicated that a significant improvement in likelihood was obtained by accounting for transition bias. LRTs also indicated that codon frequencies were significantly biased. Interestingly, modeling codon usage by treating nucleotide frequencies at each codon position as evolving independently (F3 x 4; ![]()
|
Nucleotide substitution at fourfold degenerate sites:
Third codon positions of fourfold degenerate codons were sampled from each sequence (cyt b, 194 nt; ND4-ND4L, 147 nt; COI, 165 nt). A hierarchy of candidate DNA substitution models was constructed on the basis of three substitution matrices and two models of among-sites rate variation. Substitution matrices included the F81 matrix (![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Likelihood-ratio tests (Table A22) revealed that the GTR substitution matrix (![]()
parameter is large (![]()
|
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