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Dive into the research topics where Olga Derbeneva is active.

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Featured researches published by Olga Derbeneva.


Annals of Human Genetics | 2005

Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in Indigenous Populations of the Southern Extent of Siberia, and the Origins of Native American Haplogroups

E. B. Starikovskaya; Rem I. Sukernik; Olga Derbeneva; N. V. Volodko; Eduardo Ruiz-Pesini; Antonio Torroni; Michael D. Brown; Marie T. Lott; Seyed H. Hosseini; Kirsi Huoponen; Douglas C. Wallace

In search of the ancestors of Native American mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups, we analyzed the mtDNA of 531 individuals from nine indigenous populations in Siberia. All mtDNAs were subjected to high‐resolution RFLP analysis, sequencing of the control‐region hypervariable segment I (HVS‐I), and surveyed for additional polymorphic markers in the coding region. Furthermore, the mtDNAs selected according to haplogroup/subhaplogroup status were completely sequenced. Phylogenetic analyses of the resulting data, combined with those from previously published Siberian arctic and sub‐arctic populations, revealed that remnants of the ancient Siberian gene pool are still evident in Siberian populations, suggesting that the founding haplotypes of the Native American A‐D branches originated in different parts of Siberia. Thus, lineage A complete sequences revealed in the Mansi of the Lower Ob and the Ket of the Lower Yenisei belong to A1, suggesting that A1 mtDNAs occasionally found in the remnants of hunting‐gathering populations of northwestern and northern Siberia belonged to a common gene pool of the Siberian progenitors of Paleoindians. Moreover, lineage B1, which is the most closely related to the American B2, occurred in the Tubalar and Tuvan inhabiting the territory between the upper reaches of the Ob River in the west, to the Upper Yenisei region in the east. Finally, the sequence variants of haplogroups C and D, which are most similar to Native American C1 and D1, were detected in the Ulchi of the Lower Amur. Overall, our data suggest that the immediate ancestors of the Siberian/Beringian migrants who gave rise to ancient (pre‐Clovis) Paleoindians have a common origin with aboriginal people of the area now designated the Altai‐Sayan Upland, as well as the Lower Amur/Sea of Okhotsk region.


Current protocols in human genetics | 2013

mtDNA Variation and Analysis Using Mitomap and Mitomaster

Marie T. Lott; Jeremy Leipzig; Olga Derbeneva; H. Michael Xie; Dimitra Chalkia; Mahdi Sarmady; Vincent Procaccio; Douglas C. Wallace

The Mitomap database of human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) information has been an important compilation of mtDNA variation for researchers, clinicians, and genetic counselors for the past 25 years. The Mitomap protocol shows how users may look up human mitochondrial gene loci, search for public mitochondrial sequences, and browse or search for reported general population nucleotide variants as well as those reported in clinical disease. Within Mitomap is the powerful sequence analysis tool for human mitochondrial DNA, Mitomaster. The Mitomaster protocol gives step‐by‐step instructions showing how to submit sequences to identify nucleotide variants relative to the rCRS, determine the haplogroup, and view species conservation. User‐supplied sequences, GenBank identifiers, and single‐nucleotide variants may be analyzed. Curr. Protoc. Bioinform. 44:1.23.1‐1.23.26.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Progressive increase in mtDNA 3243A>G heteroplasmy causes abrupt transcriptional reprogramming

Martin Picard; Jiangwen Zhang; Saege Hancock; Olga Derbeneva; Ryan Golhar; Pawel Golik; Sean O’Hearn; Shawn Levy; Prasanth Potluri; Maria Lvova; Antonio Davila; Chun Shi Lin; Juan C. Perin; Eric Rappaport; Hakon Hakonarson; Ian A. Trounce; Vincent Procaccio; Douglas C. Wallace

Significance Mitochondria generate signals that regulate nuclear gene expression via retrograde signaling, but this phenomenon is rendered more complex by the quantitative differences in the percentage of mutant and normal mtDNAs that can exist within patient cells. This study demonstrates that depending upon its relative cytoplasmic levels, a single mtDNA point mutation can cause a discrete set of cellular transcriptional responses within cells of the same nuclear background. This qualitative regulation of nuclear gene expression by quantitative changes in mtDNA mutant levels challenges the traditional “single mutation–single disease” concept and provides an alternative perspective on the molecular basis of complex metabolic and degenerative diseases, cancer, and aging. Variation in the intracellular percentage of normal and mutant mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNA) (heteroplasmy) can be associated with phenotypic heterogeneity in mtDNA diseases. Individuals that inherit the common disease-causing mtDNA tRNALeu(UUR) 3243A>G mutation and harbor ∼10–30% 3243G mutant mtDNAs manifest diabetes and occasionally autism; individuals with ∼50–90% mutant mtDNAs manifest encephalomyopathies; and individuals with ∼90–100% mutant mtDNAs face perinatal lethality. To determine the basis of these abrupt phenotypic changes, we generated somatic cell cybrids harboring increasing levels of the 3243G mutant and analyzed the associated cellular phenotypes and nuclear DNA (nDNA) and mtDNA transcriptional profiles by RNA sequencing. Small increases in mutant mtDNAs caused relatively modest defects in oxidative capacity but resulted in sharp transitions in cellular phenotype and gene expression. Cybrids harboring 20–30% 3243G mtDNAs had reduced mtDNA mRNA levels, rounded mitochondria, and small cell size. Cybrids with 50–90% 3243G mtDNAs manifest induction of glycolytic genes, mitochondrial elongation, increased mtDNA mRNA levels, and alterations in expression of signal transduction, epigenomic regulatory, and neurodegenerative disease-associated genes. Finally, cybrids with 100% 3243G experienced reduced mtDNA transcripts, rounded mitochondria, and concomitant changes in nuclear gene expression. Thus, striking phase changes occurred in nDNA and mtDNA gene expression in response to the modest changes of the mtDNA 3243G mutant levels. Hence, a major factor in the phenotypic variation in heteroplasmic mtDNA mutations is the limited number of states that the nucleus can acquire in response to progressive changes in mitochondrial retrograde signaling.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Analysis of Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in the Aleuts of the Commander Islands and Its Implications for the Genetic History of Beringia

Olga Derbeneva; Rem I. Sukernik; N. V. Volodko; Seyed H. Hosseini; Marie T. Lott; Douglas C. Wallace

The Aleuts are aboriginal inhabitants of the Aleutian archipelago, including Bering and Copper (Medny) Islands of the Commanders, and seem to be the survivors of the inhabitants of the southern belt of the Bering Land Bridge that connected Chukotka/Kamchatka and Alaska during the end of the Ice Age. Thirty mtDNA samples collected in the Commanders, as well as seven mtDNA samples from Sireniki Eskimos in Chukotka who belong to the Beringian-specific subhaplogroup D2, were studied through complete sequencing. This analysis has provided evidence that all 37 of these mtDNAs are closely related, since they share the founding haplotype for subhaplogroup D2. We also demonstrated that, unlike the Eskimos and Na-Dene, the Aleuts of the Commanders were founded by a single lineage of haplogroup D2, which had acquired the novel transversion mutation 8910A. The phylogeny of haplogroup D complete sequences showed that (1) the D2 root sequence type originated among the latest inhabitants of Beringia and (2) the Aleut 8910A sublineage of D2 is a part of larger radiation of rooted D2, which gave rise to D2a (Na-Dene), D2b (Aleut), and D2c (Eskimo) sublineages. The geographic specificity and remarkable intrinsic diversity of D2 lineages support the refugial hypothesis, which assumes that the founding population of Eskimo-Aleut originated in Beringan/southwestern Alaskan refugia during the early postglacial period, rather than having reached the shores of Alaska as the result of recent wave of migration from interior Siberia.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Mitochondrial DNA variant associated with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy and high-altitude Tibetans

Fuyun Ji; Mark S. Sharpley; Olga Derbeneva; Leonardo Scherer Alves; Pin Qian; Yaoli Wang; Dimitra Chalkia; Maria Lvova; Jiancheng Xu; Wei Yao; Mariella Simon; Julia Platt; Shiqin Xu; Alessia Angelin; Antonio Davila; Taosheng Huang; Ping H. Wang; Lee-Ming Chuang; Lorna G. Moore; Guisheng Qian; Douglas C. Wallace

The distinction between mild pathogenic mtDNA mutations and population polymorphisms can be ambiguous because both are homoplasmic, alter conserved functions, and correlate with disease. One possible explanation for this ambiguity is that the same variant may have different consequences in different contexts. The NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1 (ND1) nucleotide 3394 T > C (Y30H) variant is such a case. This variant has been associated with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy and it reduces complex I activity and cellular respiration between 7% and 28% on the Asian B4c and F1 haplogroup backgrounds. However, complex I activity between B4c and F1 mtDNAs, which harbor the common 3394T allele, can also differ by 30%. In Asia, the 3394C variant is most commonly associated with the M9 haplogroup, which is rare at low elevations but increases in frequency with elevation to an average of 25% of the Tibetan mtDNAs (odds ratio = 23.7). In high-altitude Tibetan and Indian populations, the 3394C variant occurs on five different macrohaplogroup M haplogroup backgrounds and is enriched on the M9 background in Tibet and the C4a4 background on the Indian Deccan Plateau (odds ratio = 21.9). When present on the M9 background, the 3394C variant is associated with a complex I activity that is equal to or higher than that of the 3394T variant on the B4c and F1 backgrounds. Hence, the 3394C variant can either be deleterious or beneficial depending on its haplogroup and environmental context. Thus, this mtDNA variant fulfills the criteria for a common variant that predisposes to a “complex” disease.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2008

A mitochondrial etiology of neurodegenerative diseases: evidence from Parkinson's disease.

Elza Khusnutdinova; Irina R. Gilyazova; Eduardo Ruiz-Pesini; Olga Derbeneva; R. I. Khusainova; I. M. Khidiyatova; Rim Magzhanov; Douglas C. Wallace

Evidence continues to accrue implicating mitochondrial dysfunction in the etiology of a number of neurodegenerative diseases. For example, Parkinsons disease (PD) can be induced by mitochondrial toxins, and nuclear DNA (nDNA) loci linked to PD have been associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Although conclusions about the role of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variants in PD vary, we argue here that this is attributable to the novel genetics of the mtDNA and the fact that clinically relevant mtDNA variation encompasses ancient adaptive polymorphisms, recent deleterious mutations, and somatic mutations. An mtDNA association with PD is supported by an analysis of the Russian Tatar population which revealed that polymorphisms associated with haplogroup H mtDNAs increased PD risk (odds ratio [OR]= 2.58, P= 0.0001), whereas those associated with haplogroup UK cluster mtDNAs were protective (OR = 0.38, P= 0.003). Moreover, mtDNA sequencing revealed that PD patients with either haplogroup H or UK cluster mtDNAs can harbor additional recent variants that might further modulate PD risk. Therefore, the complexity of PD genetics may reflect the complex mitochondrial genetics.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2010

Association between mitochondrial DNA variations and Alzheimer's Disease in the ADNI cohort

Anita Lakatos; Olga Derbeneva; Danny Younes; David B. Keator; Trygve E. Bakken; Maria Lvova; Marty C. Brandon; Guia Guffanti; Dora Reglodi; Andrew J. Saykin; Michael W. Weiner; Fabio Macciardi; Nicholas J. Schork; Douglas C. Wallace; Steven G. Potkin

Despite the central role of amyloid deposition in the development of Alzheimers disease (AD), the pathogenesis of AD still remains elusive at the molecular level. Increasing evidence suggests that compromised mitochondrial function contributes to the aging process and thus may increase the risk of AD. Dysfunctional mitochondria contribute to reactive oxygen species (ROS) which can lead to extensive macromolecule oxidative damage and the progression of amyloid pathology. Oxidative stress and amyloid toxicity leave neurons chemically vulnerable. Because the brain relies on aerobic metabolism, it is apparent that mitochondria are critical for the cerebral function. Mitochondrial DNA sequence changes could shift cell dynamics and facilitate neuronal vulnerability. Therefore we postulated that mitochondrial DNA sequence polymorphisms may increase the risk of AD. We evaluated the role of mitochondrial haplogroups derived from 138 mitochondrial polymorphisms in 358 Caucasian Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) subjects. Our results indicate that the mitochondrial haplogroup UK may confer genetic susceptibility to AD independently of the apolipoprotein E4 (APOE4) allele.


Pediatric Research | 2006

Clinical and Functional Characterization of a Human ORNT1 Mutation (T32R) in the Hyperornithinemia-Hyperammonemia-Homocitrullinuria (HHH) Syndrome

Jose Camacho; Rebecca Mardach; Natalia Rioseco-Camacho; Eduardo Ruiz-Pesini; Olga Derbeneva; Dario Andrade; Frank Zaldivar; Yong Qu; Stephen D. Cederbaum

We studied two related families (HHH013 and HHH015) with the hyperornithinemia-hyperammonemia-homocitrullinuria (HHH) syndrome, a disorder of the urea cycle and ornithine degradation pathway, who have the same novel ornithine transporter (ORNT1) genotype (T32R) but a variable phenotype. Both HHH015 patients are doing well in school and are clinically stable; conversely, the three affected HHH013 siblings had academic difficulties and one suffered recurrent episodes of hyperammonemia and ultimately died. Overexpression studies revealed that the product of the ORNT1-T32R allele has residual function. Ornithine transport studies in HHH015 fibroblasts, however, showed basal activity similar to fibroblasts carrying nonfunctional ORNT1 alleles. We also examined two potential modifying factors, the ORNT2 gene and the mitochondrial DNA lineage (haplogroup). Haplogroups, associated with specific diseases, are hypothesized to influence mitochondrial function. Results demonstrated that both HHH015 patients are heterozygous for an ORNT2 gain of function polymorphism and belong to haplogroup A whereas the HHH013 siblings carry the wild-type ORNT2 and are haplogroup H. These observations suggest that the ORNT1 genotype cannot predict the phenotype of HHH patients. The reason for the phenotypic variability is unknown, but factors such as redundant transporters and mitochondrial lineage may contribute to the neuropathophysiology of HHH patients.


International Journal of Immunogenetics | 2015

Towards allele-level human leucocyte antigens genotyping – assessing two next-generation sequencing platforms: Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine and Illumina MiSeq

Jamie Duke; Curt Lind; Kate Mackiewicz; Deborah Ferriola; Anna Papazoglou; Olga Derbeneva; D. Wallace; Dimitri Monos

Human leucocyte antigens (HLA) typing has been a challenge due to extreme polymorphism of the HLA genes and limitations of the current technologies and protocols used for their characterization. Recently, next‐generation sequencing techniques have been shown to be a well‐suited technology for the complete characterization of the HLA genes. However, a comprehensive assessment of the different platforms for HLA typing, describing the limitations and advantages of each of them, has not been presented. We have compared the Ion Torrent Personal Genome Machine (PGM) and Illumina MiSeq, currently the two most frequently used platforms for diagnostic applications, for a number of metrics including total output, quality score per position across the reads and error rates after alignment which can all affect the accuracy of HLA genotyping. For this purpose, we have used one homozygous and three heterozygous well‐characterized samples, at HLA‐A, HLA‐B, HLA‐C, HLA‐DRB1 and HLA‐DQB1. The total output of bases produced by the MiSeq was higher, and they have higher quality scores and a lower overall error rate than the PGM. The MiSeq also has a higher fidelity when sequencing through homopolymer regions up to 9 bp in length. The need to set phase between distant polymorphic sites was more readily achieved with MiSeq using paired‐end sequencing of fragments that are longer than those obtained with PGM. Additionally, we have assessed the workflows of the different platforms for complexity of sample preparation, sequencer operation and turnaround time. The effects of data quality and quantity can impact the genotyping results; having an adequate amount of good quality data to analyse will be imperative for confident HLA genotyping. The overall turnaround time can be very comparable between the two platforms; however, the complexity of sample preparation is higher with PGM, while the actual sequencing time is longer with MiSeq.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Mitochondrial energy deficiency leads to hyperproliferation of skeletal muscle mitochondria and enhanced insulin sensitivity

Ryan M. Morrow; Martin Picard; Olga Derbeneva; Jeremy Leipzig; Meagan J. McManus; Gilles Gouspillou; Sébastien Barbat-Artigas; Carlos Dos Santos; Russell T. Hepple; Deborah G. Murdock; Douglas C. Wallace

Significance Mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with type II diabetes and metabolic syndrome, but whether it is cause or consequence is debated. By showing that increased mitochondrial respiration can impart glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity, and resistance to high fat diet (HFD) toxicity, we provide evidence that mitochondria contributes to the etiology of metabolic disease. Inactivation of adenine nucleotide translocator isoform 1 (ANT1) results in proliferation of partially uncoupled muscle mitochondrial respiration, creating a sink for excess calories. Although ANT1-deficient muscle induces expression of Fgf21, FGF21 level is not elevated in blood, and FGF21 and UCP1 mRNAs are not increased in liver or brown adipose tissue (BAT). If increased mitochondrial respiration prevents HFD toxicity, then decreased mitochondrial respiration may contribute to metabolic disease. Diabetes is associated with impaired glucose metabolism in the presence of excess insulin. Glucose and fatty acids provide reducing equivalents to mitochondria to generate energy, and studies have reported mitochondrial dysfunction in type II diabetes patients. If mitochondrial dysfunction can cause diabetes, then we hypothesized that increased mitochondrial metabolism should render animals resistant to diabetes. This was confirmed in mice in which the heart–muscle–brain adenine nucleotide translocator isoform 1 (ANT1) was inactivated. ANT1-deficient animals are insulin-hypersensitive, glucose-tolerant, and resistant to high fat diet (HFD)-induced toxicity. In ANT1-deficient skeletal muscle, mitochondrial gene expression is induced in association with the hyperproliferation of mitochondria. The ANT1-deficient muscle mitochondria produce excess reactive oxygen species (ROS) and are partially uncoupled. Hence, the muscle respiration under nonphosphorylating conditions is increased. Muscle transcriptome analysis revealed the induction of mitochondrial biogenesis, down-regulation of diabetes-related genes, and increased expression of the genes encoding the myokines FGF21 and GDF15. However, FGF21 was not elevated in serum, and FGF21 and UCP1 mRNAs were not induced in liver or brown adipose tissue (BAT). Hence, increased oxidation of dietary-reducing equivalents by elevated muscle mitochondrial respiration appears to be the mechanism by which ANT1-deficient mice prevent diabetes, demonstrating that the rate of mitochondrial oxidation of calories is important in the etiology of metabolic disease.

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Douglas C. Wallace

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Maria Lvova

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Rem I. Sukernik

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Dimitra Chalkia

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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N. V. Volodko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Jeremy Leipzig

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Mark S. Sharpley

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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