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Featured researches published by Kari Majamaa.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Phylogenetic network for European mtDNA.

Saara Finnilä; Mervi S. Lehtonen; Kari Majamaa

The sequence in the first hypervariable segment (HVS-I) of the control region has been used as a source of evolutionary information in most phylogenetic analyses of mtDNA. Population genetic inference would benefit from a better understanding of the variation in the mtDNA coding region, but, thus far, complete mtDNA sequences have been rare. We determined the nucleotide sequence in the coding region of mtDNA from 121 Finns, by conformation-sensitive gel electrophoresis and subsequent sequencing and by direct sequencing of the D loop. Furthermore, 71 sequences from our previous reports were included, so that the samples represented all the mtDNA haplogroups present in the Finnish population. We found a total of 297 variable sites in the coding region, which allowed the compilation of unambiguous phylogenetic networks. The D loop harbored 104 variable sites, and, in most cases, these could be localized within the coding-region networks, without discrepancies. Interestingly, many homoplasies were detected in the coding region. Nucleotide variation in the rRNA and tRNA genes was 6%, and that in the third nucleotide positions of structural genes amounted to 22% of that in the HVS-I. The complete networks enabled the relationships between the mtDNA haplogroups to be analyzed. Phylogenetic networks based on the entire coding-region sequence in mtDNA provide a rich source for further population genetic studies, and complete sequences make it easier to differentiate between disease-causing mutations and rare polymorphisms.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1998

Epidemiology of A3243G, the Mutation for Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy, Lactic Acidosis, and Strokelike Episodes: Prevalence of the Mutation in an Adult Population

Kari Majamaa; Jukka S. Moilanen; Seija Uimonen; Anne M. Remes; Pasi I. Salmela; Mikko Kärppä; Kirsi Majamaa-Voltti; Harri Rusanen; Martti Sorri; Keijo J. Peuhkurinen; Ilmo E. Hassinen

Mitochondrial diseases are characterized by considerable clinical variability and are most often caused by mutations in mtDNA. Because of the phenotypic variability, epidemiological studies of the frequency of these disorders have been difficult to perform. We studied the prevalence of the mtDNA mutation at nucleotide 3243 in an adult population of 245,201 individuals. This mutation is the most common molecular etiology of MELAS syndrome (mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes), one of the clinical entities among the mitochondrial disorders. Patients with diabetes mellitus, sensorineural hearing impairment, epilepsy, occipital brain infarct, ophthalmoplegia, cerebral white-matter disease, basal-ganglia calcifications, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, or ataxia were ascertained on the basis of defined clinical criteria and family-history data. A total of 615 patients were identified, and 480 samples were examined for the mutation. The mutation was found in 11 pedigrees, and its frequency was calculated to be >=16. 3/100,000 in the adult population (95% confidence interval 11.3-21. 4/100,000). The mutation had arisen in the population at least nine times, as determined by mtDNA haplotyping. Clinical evaluation of the probands revealed a syndrome that most frequently consisted of hearing impairment, cognitive decline, and short stature. The high prevalence of the common MELAS mutation in the adult population suggests that mitochondrial disorders constitute one of the largest diagnostic categories of neurogenetic diseases.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Mitochondrial DNA Polymerase W748S Mutation: A Common Cause of Autosomal Recessive Ataxia with Ancient European Origin

Anna H. Hakonen; Silja Heiskanen; Vesa Juvonen; Ilse Lappalainen; Petri Luoma; Maria Rantamäki; Gert Van Goethem; A. Löfgren; Peter Hackman; Anders Paetau; Seppo Kaakkola; Kari Majamaa; Teppo Varilo; Bjarne Udd; Helena Kääriäinen; Laurence A. Bindoff; Anu Suomalainen

Mutations in the catalytic subunit of the mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma (POLG) have been found to be an important cause of neurological disease. Recently, we and collaborators reported a new neurodegenerative disorder with autosomal recessive ataxia in four patients homozygous for two amino acid changes in POLG: W748S in cis with E1143G. Here, we studied the frequency of this allele and found it to be among the most common genetic causes of inherited ataxia in Finland. We identified 27 patients with mitochondrial recessive ataxia syndrome (MIRAS) from 15 Finnish families, with a carrier frequency in the general population of 1 : 125. Since the mutation pair W748S+E1143G has also been described in European patients, we examined the haplotypes of 13 non-Finnish, European patients with the W748S mutation. Haplotype analysis revealed that all the chromosomes carrying these two changes, in patients from Finland, Norway, the United Kingdom, and Belgium, originate from a common ancient founder. In Finland and Norway, long, common, northern haplotypes, outside the core haplotype, could be identified. Despite having identical homozygous mutations, the Finnish patients with this adult- or juvenile-onset disease had surprisingly heterogeneous phenotypes, albeit with a characteristic set of features, including ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, dysarthria, mild cognitive impairment, involuntary movements, psychiatric symptoms, and epileptic seizures. The high carrier frequency in Finland, the high number of patients in Norway, and the ancient European founder chromosome indicate that this newly identified ataxia should be considered in the first-line differential diagnosis of progressive ataxia syndromes.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Mitochondrial DNA and ACTN3 genotypes in Finnish elite endurance and sprint athletes

Anna-Kaisa Niemi; Kari Majamaa

Differences in ACTN3 (alpha-actinin 3) genotypes have been reported among endurance and power athletes. Elite athletic performance in endurance sports should also depend on mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) that produces ATP for muscle metabolism. We determined mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and ACTN3 genotypes in Finnish elite endurance (n=52) and sprint (n=89) athletes, and found that the frequencies of mtDNA haplogroups differed significantly between the two groups. Most notably, none of the endurance athletes belonged to haplogroup K or subhaplogroup J2, both of which have previously been associated with longevity. The frequency of ACTN3 XX genotype was higher and that of RR was lower among Finnish endurance athletes, and, in addition, none of the top Finnish sprinters had the XX genotype. Lack of mtDNA haplogroup K and subhaplogroup J2 among elite endurance athletes suggests that these haplogroups are ‘uncoupling genomes’. Such genomes should not be beneficial to endurance-type athletic performance but should be beneficial to longevity, since uncoupling of OXPHOS reduces the production of ATP, reduces the release of reactive oxygen species and generates heat.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

The Matrilineal Ancestry of Ashkenazi Jewry: Portrait of a Recent Founder Event

Doron M. Behar; Ene Metspalu; Toomas Kivisild; Alessandro Achilli; Yarin Hadid; Shay Tzur; Luísa Pereira; António Amorim; Lluis Quintana-Murci; Kari Majamaa; Corinna Herrnstadt; Neil Howell; Oleg Balanovsky; Ildus Kutuev; Andrey Pshenichnov; David Gurwitz; Batsheva Bonne-Tamir; Antonio Torroni; Richard Villems; Karl Skorecki

Both the extent and location of the maternal ancestral deme from which the Ashkenazi Jewry arose remain obscure. Here, using complete sequences of the maternally inherited mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), we show that close to one-half of Ashkenazi Jews, estimated at 8,000,000 people, can be traced back to only 4 women carrying distinct mtDNAs that are virtually absent in other populations, with the important exception of low frequencies among non-Ashkenazi Jews. We conclude that four founding mtDNAs, likely of Near Eastern ancestry, underwent major expansion(s) in Europe within the past millennium.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

A combination of three common inherited mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms promotes longevity in Finnish and Japanese subjects

Anna-Kaisa Niemi; Jukka S. Moilanen; Masashi Tanaka; Antti Hervonen; Mikko Hurme; Terho Lehtimäki; Yasumichi Arai; Nobuyoshi Hirose; Kari Majamaa

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) coding region polymorphisms, as well as the 150T polymorphism in the noncoding region, have been associated with longevity. We have studied here the association of 150T with longevity further and assessed differences in this association between various mtDNA haplogroups. We analysed a sample of 321 very old subjects and 489 middle-aged controls from Finland and Japan. 150T was more frequent among the very old than among the controls in both the Finnish and Japanese subjects. Interestingly, the association was not similar in all haplogroups, and a stratified analysis revealed that two additional common polymorphisms, 489C and 10398G, modified the association between 150T and longevity. These findings suggest that longevity is partly determined by epistatic interactions involving these three mtDNA loci.


Neurology | 1993

Exclusion of mutations in the gene for type III collagen (COL3A1) as a common cause of intracranial aneurysms or cervical artery dissections: Results from sequence analysis of the coding sequences of type III collagen from 55 unrelated patients

Helena Kuivaniemi; Darwin J. Prockop; Yuli Wu; S. Madhatheri; Caren Kleinert; James Joseph Earley; A. Jokinen; Catherine A. Stolle; Kari Majamaa; Vilho V. Myllylä; Ö. Norrgård; Wouter I. Schievink; Bahram Mokri; O. Fukawa; J.W.M. ter Berg; A. De Paepe; Andres M. Lozano; R. Leblanc; M. Ryynänen; B. T. Baxter; Shikata H; Robert E. Ferrell; G. Tromp

We performed detailed DNA sequencing analysis on type III collagen cDNA from 58 patients with either intracranial artery aneurysms or cervical artery dissections. The 58 patients were of seven different nationalities; among the patients were three pairs of relatives, so that 55 were unrelated, and of these, 29 had at least one blood relative with either an intracranial artery aneurysm or a cervical artery dissection. The age of the patients at the time of diagnosis ranged from 15 to 68 years (mean ± SD = 40.3 ± 11.0). The study group consisted of 25 males and 33 females. The analysis covered 3,232 nucleotides of significant (nonredundant) sequences per allele; therefore, we analyzed as many as 355,520 nucleotides. Mutations in the coding sequences for the triple-helical domain of type III collagen were excluded in 40 individuals with intracranial aneurysms and 18 individuals with cervical artery dissections. Direct sequencing of polymerase chain reaction products allowed mutations to be excluded with a high degree of confidence. Mutations that markedly decreased expression from one allele were also excluded in 42 of the 58 individuals, since the presence of both bases at one or more polymorphic sites in the 42 patients showed that two alleles were transcribed. The results indicated that mutations in the gene for type III procollagen (COL3A1) are not a common cause of either intracranial artery aneurysms or cervical artery dissections.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Phylogenetic Network of the mtDNA Haplogroup U in Northern Finland Based on Sequence Analysis of the Complete Coding Region by Conformation-Sensitive Gel Electrophoresis

Saara Finnilä; Ilmo E. Hassinen; Leena Ala-Kokko; Kari Majamaa

Mutations in mtDNA have accumulated sequentially, and maternal lineages have diverged to form population-specific genotypes. Classification of the genotypes has been made based on differences found in restriction fragment analysis of the coding region or in the sequence of the hypervariable segment I. Both methods have shortcomings, as the former may not detect all the important polymorphisms and the latter makes use of a segment containing hypervariable nucleotide positions. Here, we have used conformation-sensitive gel electrophoresis (CSGE) to detect polymorphisms within the coding region of mtDNA from 22 Finns belonging to haplogroup U. Sixty-three overlapping PCR fragments covering the entire coding region were analyzed by CSGE, and the fragments that differed in their migration pattern were sequenced. CSGE proved to be a sensitive and specific method for identifying mtDNA substitutions. The phylogenetic network of the 22 coding-region sequences constituted a perfect tree, free of homoplasy, and provided several previously unidentified common polymorphisms characterizing subgroups of U. After contrasting this data with that of hypervariable segment I, we concluded that position 16192 seems to be prone to recurrent mutations and that position 16270 has experienced a back mutation. Interestingly, all 22 samples were found to belong to subcluster U5, suggesting that this subcluster is more frequent in Finns than in other European populations. Complete sequence data of the mtDNA yield a more reliable phylogenetic network and a more accurate classification of the haplogroups than previous ones. In medical genetics, such networks may help to decide between a rare polymorphism and a pathogenic mutation; in population genetics, the networks may enable more detailed analyses of population history and mtDNA evolution.


Human Genetics | 2004

Mitochondrial DNA polymorphisms as risk factors for Parkinson’s disease and Parkinson’s disease dementia

Jaana Autere; Jukka S. Moilanen; Saara Finnilä; Hilkka Soininen; Arto Mannermaa; Päivi Hartikainen; Merja Hallikainen; Kari Majamaa

The activity of complex I of the mitochondrial respiratory chain has been found to be decreased in patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD), but no mutations have been identified in genes encoding complex I subunits. Recent studies have suggested that polymorphisms in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)-encoded complex I genes (MTND) modify susceptibility to PD. We hypothesize that the risk of PD is conveyed by the total number of nonsynonymous substitutions in the MTND genes in various mtDNA lineages rather than by single mutations. To test this possibility, we determined the number of nonsynonymous substitutions of the seven MTND genes from 183 Finns. The differences in the total number of nonsynonymous substitutions and the nonsynonymous to synonymous substitution rate ratio (Ka/Ks) of MTND genes between the European mtDNA haplogroup clusters (HV, JT, KU, IWX) were analysed by using a statistical approach. Patients with PD (n=238) underwent clinical examination together with mtDNA haplogroup analysis and the clinical features between patient groups defined by the number of nonsynonymous substitutions were compared. Our analysis revealed that the haplogroup clusters HV and KU had a lower average number of amino acid replacements and a lower Ka/Ks ratio in the MTND genes than clusters JT and IWX. Supercluster JTIWX with the highest number of amino acid replacements was more frequent among PD patients and even more frequent among patients with PD who developed dementia. Our results suggest that a relative excess of nonsynonymous mutations in MTND genes in supercluster JTWIX is associated with an increased risk of PD and the disease progression to dementia.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Using genome-wide complex trait analysis to quantify ‘missing heritability’ in Parkinson's disease

Margaux F. Keller; Mohamad Saad; Jose Bras; Francesco Bettella; Nayia Nicolaou; Javier Simón-Sánchez; Florian Mittag; Finja Büchel; Manu Sharma; J. Raphael Gibbs; Claudia Schulte; Valentina Moskvina; Alexandra Durr; Peter Holmans; Laura L. Kilarski; Rita Guerreiro; Dena Hernandez; Alexis Brice; Pauli Ylikotila; Hreinn Stefansson; Kari Majamaa; Huw R. Morris; Nigel Melville Williams; Thomas Gasser; Peter Heutink; Nicholas W. Wood; John Hardy; Maria Martinez; Andrew Singleton; Michael A. Nalls

Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have been successful at identifying single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) highly associated with common traits; however, a great deal of the heritable variation associated with common traits remains unaccounted for within the genome. Genome-wide complex trait analysis (GCTA) is a statistical method that applies a linear mixed model to estimate phenotypic variance of complex traits explained by genome-wide SNPs, including those not associated with the trait in a GWAS. We applied GCTA to 8 cohorts containing 7096 case and 19 455 control individuals of European ancestry in order to examine the missing heritability present in Parkinsons disease (PD). We meta-analyzed our initial results to produce robust heritability estimates for PD types across cohorts. Our results identify 27% (95% CI 17-38, P = 8.08E - 08) phenotypic variance associated with all types of PD, 15% (95% CI -0.2 to 33, P = 0.09) phenotypic variance associated with early-onset PD and 31% (95% CI 17-44, P = 1.34E - 05) phenotypic variance associated with late-onset PD. This is a substantial increase from the genetic variance identified by top GWAS hits alone (between 3 and 5%) and indicates there are substantially more risk loci to be identified. Our results suggest that although GWASs are a useful tool in identifying the most common variants associated with complex disease, a great deal of common variants of small effect remain to be discovered.

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Anne M. Remes

University of Eastern Finland

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Heikki Rantala

Oulu University Hospital

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