Survival of the densest accounts for the expansion of mitochondrial mutations in ageing
The expansion of deleted mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecules has been linked to ageing, particularly in skeletal muscle fibres; its mechanism has remained unclear for three decades. Previous accounts assigned a replicative advantage to the deletions, but there is evidence that cells can, instead, se...
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Zusammenfassung: | The expansion of deleted mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) molecules has been linked
to ageing, particularly in skeletal muscle fibres; its mechanism has remained
unclear for three decades. Previous accounts assigned a replicative advantage
to the deletions, but there is evidence that cells can, instead, selectively
remove defective mtDNA. We present a spatial model that, without a replicative
advantage, but instead through a combination of enhanced density for mutants
and noise, produces a wave of expanding mutations with wave speed consistent
with experimental data, unlike a standard model based on replicative advantage.
We provide a formula that predicts that the wave speed drops with copy number,
in agreement with experimental data. Crucially, our model yields travelling
waves of mutants even if mutants are preferentially eliminated. Justified by
this exemplar of how noise, density and spatial structure affect muscle ageing,
we introduce the mechanism of stochastic survival of the densest, an
alternative to replicative advantage, that may underpin other phenomena, like
the evolution of altruism. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2009.00403 |