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Pervasive lesion segregation shapes cancer genome evolution.

Authors :
Aitken, Sarah J.
Anderson, Craig J.
Connor, Frances
Pich, Oriol
Sundaram, Vasavi
Feig, Christine
Rayner, Tim F.
Lukk, Margus
Aitken, Stuart
Luft, Juliet
Kentepozidou, Elissavet
Arnedo-Pac, Claudia
Beentjes, Sjoerd V.
Davies, Susan E.
Drews, Ruben M.
Ewing, Ailith
Kaiser, Vera B.
Khamseh, Ava
López-Arribillaga, Erika
Redmond, Aisling M.
Source :
Nature; 7/9/2020, Vol. 583 Issue 7815, p265-270, 6p, 2 Diagrams, 1 Chart, 11 Graphs
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Cancers arise through the acquisition of oncogenic mutations and grow by clonal expansion1,2. Here we reveal that most mutagenic DNA lesions are not resolved into a mutated DNA base pair within a single cell cycle. Instead, DNA lesions segregate, unrepaired, into daughter cells for multiple cell generations, resulting in the chromosome-scale phasing of subsequent mutations. We characterize this process in mutagen-induced mouse liver tumours and show that DNA replication across persisting lesions can produce multiple alternative alleles in successive cell divisions, thereby generating both multiallelic and combinatorial genetic diversity. The phasing of lesions enables accurate measurement of strand-biased repair processes, quantification of oncogenic selection and fine mapping of sister-chromatid-exchange events. Finally, we demonstrate that lesion segregation is a unifying property of exogenous mutagens, including UV light and chemotherapy agents in human cells and tumours, which has profound implications for the evolution and adaptation of cancer genomes. Mutagenic lesions such as those that give rise to cancer frequently segregate—unrepaired—during cell division, resulting in phasing of multiple alleles across generations of daughter cells and consequent tumour heterogeneity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
583
Issue :
7815
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
144457350
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-020-2435-1