Really elegant work, and something tells me the answer to the mammalian question is just around the corner 👏
04.12.2025 10:48
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Bravo 👏 @ryanlab.bsky.social - big moment for the lab and important findings re potential pathogenic mechanisms of mitochondrial disease
20.11.2025 17:21
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Now that’s the kind of reach we can only dream of! 😊 thanks
08.11.2025 22:04
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This made my day :) thank you
07.11.2025 09:22
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Mitochondrial Ribosome Mutations: A Hidden Driver in Cancer
YouTube video by The Sanz Science Experience
And finally - if you'd like to have our recent paper on functionally dominant mutations in mtDNA explained in podcast form, please see youtu.be/TY1hxrJzq5Q?...
p.s. thank you @albertosanzmon1.bsky.social :)
05.11.2025 13:49
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Thank you for your kind words Christian!
04.11.2025 08:03
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Thank you Alexey, I think the functional data we generated bear out that point well.
03.11.2025 11:51
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Oof - a bunch of those images didn't come out at all! If you want to see them all the more reason to go check out the paper!
03.11.2025 11:19
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Huge thanks to all of our fantastic collaborators (many of whom are not on Bsky) within @cruk-si.bsky.social @mskcancercenter.bsky.social @helsinki.fi @uofglasgow.bsky.social and more - this was a team effort, supported by @cancerresearchuk.org and the NIH/National Cancer Institute.
03.11.2025 11:14
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Why this matters #2:
These mutations have never been seen in the human germline or in mito disease.
Clearly they are not compatible with life, but tumors are not only unfazed by this, they are happily selecting for the most deleterious mtDNA mutations observed on planet earth.
Why is that?
03.11.2025 11:14
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Why this matters #1:
Most mtDNA mutations in cancer have never been studied, and many are 5-50% heteroplasmy (VAF).
Because of the low heteroplasmy, they are often discounted as non-functional passengers.
The discoveries described in this paper establish that this is not a safe assumption.
03.11.2025 11:14
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rRNA hotspot mutations are clearly something else. Given their impact at very low heteroplasmy, we have termed these variants 'functionally dominant'.
03.11.2025 11:14
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As I said about 5000 posts back, canonical mtDNA mutations associated with mitochondrial disease need heteroplasmies over 50% to become penetrant -this makes them 'functionally recessive'.
03.11.2025 11:14
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This exemplar mutation we've been able to validate really matters, and not just because it's the first time anyone did it. Disease-associated mtDNA mutations having an impact below 50% heteroplasmy, and in this case quite a long way below, is very important for interpreting tumor genomics.
03.11.2025 11:14
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And in a final flourish, one of my favourite analyses, using the DOGMA output, Sonia was able to establish that the heteroplasmy threshold for a transcriptional phenotype of our example rRNA hotspot was somewhere ~20-30%.
03.11.2025 11:14
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Using the powerful DOGMA-seq method from Leif Ludwig (no Bsky) and @caleblareau.bsky.social, we were able to tease apart heteroplasmic dosage of m.1227G>A on cellular transcriptional phenotype, showing a clear effect on mitochondrial transcripts, but also (gasp) non-mitochondrial ribosomes...
03.11.2025 11:14
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This was coupled to a clearly perturbed mitoribosome assembly/translational profile, again from a low heteroplasmy (38%). If you're not seeing it immediately don't sweat - it took @mitogene.bsky.social ~5 years to teach me how to interpret these things
03.11.2025 11:14
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Interestingly, even after all that screening we couldn't get the bulk heteroplasmy of this recurrent mutation, m.1227G>A, above ~40%. And even more interesting, we saw massive effects of this mutation on metabolism, mitochondrial function and protein levels starting from heteroplasmy of ~10%.
03.11.2025 11:14
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a man in a suit and tie stands next to another man in a yellow shirt and tie
ALT: a man in a suit and tie stands next to another man in a yellow shirt and tie
(This was painful - introducing any old mutation somewhere in mtDNA is one thing, but trying to edit a single, specific position while avoiding off-targets is still a major challenge. In this case we had a 2% hit rate from candidate reagents to lead reagent. You have been warned!) #sorryjacqueline
03.11.2025 11:14
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Employing fantastic mitochondrial base editing tools developed in David Liu's lab @broadinstitute.org institute.org, we engineered in vitro models to bear recurrent rRNA mutations, which we then profiled extensively to see what was happening.
03.11.2025 11:14
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Now, because nobody has really had cause or means to study mutations in these positions, the impact of a 'low heteroplasmy' mutation in one of these positions was a total unknown. They seemed pretty likely to do something, but it was validation time.
03.11.2025 11:14
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However, the heteroplasmy of these genetically recurrent and structurally clustered rRNA mutations was pretty low - rarely rising over 30% in the bulk sequencing from tumor genomes (probably an underestimate, given how much of a tumor isn’t cancer cells, but still rather low).
03.11.2025 11:14
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With beautiful structures from @amunts.bsky.social nts.bsky.social lab as our roadmap, we were able to pin the most recurrent of these onto the structure - where they also appear to cluster in two regions where they are likely to impact ribosome function - but maybe not totally catastrophically.
03.11.2025 11:14
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We were intrigued by this, as recurrence suggests positive selection pressure. Going deeper, we found that these hotspot mutations were often in positions that do not tolerate variation in the germline, and were in regions likely to impact RNA folding (WC basepairs).
03.11.2025 11:14
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In this new superpowered dataset we found again that there are quite a lot of single nucleotide variant mutations in mitochondrial rRNA of tumors, but these are not randomly distributed - they fall into clearly recurrent hotspots, affecting 4% of all tumors.
03.11.2025 11:14
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