The germline mutation rate is an important parameter that affects the amount of genetic variation and the rate of evolution. However, neither the rate of germline mutations in laboratory mice nor the biological significance of the mutation rate in mammalian populations is clear. Here we studied genome-wide mutation rates and the long-term effects of mutation accumulation on phenotype in more than 20 generations of wild-type C57BL/6 mice and mutator mice, which have high DNA replication error rates. We estimated the base-substitution mutation rate to be 5.4 × 10 −9 (95% confidence interval = 4.6 × 10 −9 -6.5 × 10 −9 ) per nucleotide per generation in C57BL/6 laboratory mice, about half the rate reported in humans. The mutation rate in mutator mice was 17 times that in wild-type mice. Abnormal phenotypes were 4.1-fold more frequent in the mutator lines than in the wild-type lines. After several generations, the mutator mice reproduced at substantially lower rates than the controls, exhibiting low pregnancy rates, lower survival rates, and smaller litter sizes, and many of the breeding lines died out. These results provide fundamental information about mouse genetics and reveal the impact of germline mutation rates on phenotypes in a mammalian population.
De novo mutations accumulate with zygotic cell divisions. However, the occurrence of these mutations and the way they are inherited by somatic cells and germ cells remain unclear. Here, we present a novel method to reconstruct cell lineages. We identified mosaic mutations in mice using deep whole-genome sequencing and reconstructed embryonic cell lineages based on the variant allele frequencies of the mutations. The reconstructed trees were confirmed using nuclear transfer experiments and the genotyping of approximately 50 offspring of each tree. The most detailed tree had 32 terminal nodes and showed cell divisions from the fertilized egg to germ cell– and somatic cell–specific lineages, indicating at least five independent cell lineages that would be selected as founders of the primordial germ cells. The contributions of each lineage to germ cells and offspring varied widely. At the emergence of the germ cell–specific lineages, 10–15 embryonic mutations had accumulated, suggesting that the pregastrulation mutation rate is 1.0 mutation per mitosis. Subsequent mutation rates were 0.7 for germ cells and 13.2 for tail fibroblasts. Our results show a new framework to assess embryonic lineages; further, we suggest an evolutionary strategy for preserving heterogeneity owing to postzygotic mutations in offspring.
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