학술논문

Mitochondrial DNA copy number dynamics and associations with the prenatal environment from birth through adolescence in a population of Dominican and African American children.
Document Type
Article
Source
Mitochondrion. Mar2023, Vol. 69, p140-146. 7p.
Subject
*AFRICAN American children
*MITOCHONDRIAL DNA
*ADOLESCENCE
*TOBACCO smoke pollution
*NUCLEAR DNA
*CHILDBIRTH
Language
ISSN
1567-7249
Abstract
• Mitochondrial DNA content (mtDNAcn) was nonlinearly associated with child age. • mtDNAcn was lowest at birth then increased in childhood to remain constant in adolescence. • Repeated measures of mtDNAcn were not associated with child sex or race/ethnicity. • mtDNAcn was associated with prenatal secondhand smoke exposure, maternal education, and socioeconomic status. • mtDNAcn was not associated with birth outcomes. Mitochondrial DNA copy number (mtDNAcn) dynamics throughout childhood are poorly understood. We profiled mtDNAcn from birth through adolescence and evaluated how the prenatal environment influences mtDNAcn across childhood. Data were collected from children from New York City followed through 18 years. Using duplexed qRT-PCR, we quantified mtDNAcn relative to nuclear DNA in blood collected from the umbilical cord (n = 450), children aged 5–7 (n = 510), and adolescents aged 15–18 (n = 278). We examined mtDNAcn across childhood with linear mixed-effects models (LMM). Relative mtDNAcn was lowest at birth (mean ± SD: 0.67 ± 0.35) and increased in childhood (1.24 ± 0.50) then slightly declined in adolescence (1.13 ± 0.44). We observed no differences in mtDNAcn by sex or race/ethnicity. mtDNAcn was positively associated with prenatal environmental tobacco smoke exposure (0.077 [ 0.01, 0.14] change in relative mtDNAcn) but negatively associated with maternal completion of high school (-0.066 [-0.13, 0.00]), with the receipt of public assistance at birth (-0.074 [-0.14, -0.01]), and when mother born outside the U.S (-0.061 [-0.13, 0.003]). Infant birth outcomes were not associated with mtDNAcn. MtDNAcn levels were dynamic through childhood and associated with some prenatal factors, underscoring the need for the investigation of longitudinal mtDNAcn for human health research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]