Litcius/Paper detail

Small mitochondrial RNAs as mediators of nuclear gene regulation, and potential implications for human health

Andrea Pozzi, Damian K. Dowling

2021BioEssays20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Much research has focused on the effects of pathogenic mitochondrial mutations on health. Notwithstanding, the mechanisms regulating the link between these mutations and their effects remain elusive in several cases. Here, we propose that certain mitochondrial mutations may disrupt function of a set of mitochondrial-transcribed small RNAs, perturbing communication between mitochondria and nucleus, leading to disease. Our hypothesis synthesises two lines of supporting evidence. First, several mitochondrial mutations cannot be directly linked to effects on energy production or protein synthesis. Second, emerging studies have described the existence of small RNAs encoded by the mitochondria and proposed their involvement in RNA interference. We present a roadmap to testing this hypothesis.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMitochondrionGeneticsGeneMitochondrial DNARNA interferenceRNACell biologyFunction (biology)Computational biologyMitochondrial Function and PathologyRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA modifications and cancer