Nucleic Acid Deletions and Copy Number in Rats
Rats fed either a cereal-based or purified diet of variable folate content (deficient, replete, or supplemented) inadvertently were infected with sialodacryoadenitis virus, which resulted in an increased frequency of hepatic mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletions that persisted for three
weeks after the period of acute signs of disease. The amount of the "common deletion" (4.8 kb, bases 8103–12937) in liver was measured by quantitative co-amplification of the mitochondrial D-loop and the mitochondrial deletion, using a real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction
assay. The relative abundance of mtDNA was determined by co-amplifying mitochondrial D-loop versus the rat β-actin gene. Virus-infected rats had more mtDNA deletions (P < 0.0001) and higher copy number (P < 0.0001) than did uninfected animals. There was no effect of
diet on frequency of deletions. Diet affected mtDNA relative abundance in the infected, but not the uninfected rats. Relative abundance was higher (P = 0.004) in rats of the high folate group than in rats of the low-folate or folate-replete groups, and was significantly higher in rats
of the cereal diet group than that in those of the purified diet group. In conclusion, sialodacryoadenitis virus infection in rats was associated with increased frequency of hepatic mtDNA deletions. Thus, sialodacryoadenitis virus infection mitigated biological processes in the liver of rats,
and mtDNA damage was modulated by diet.