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Origins and functional consequences of somatic mitochondrial DNA mutations in human cancer

Authors :
Young Seok Ju
Ludmil B Alexandrov
Moritz Gerstung
Inigo Martincorena
Serena Nik-Zainal
Manasa Ramakrishna
Helen R Davies
Elli Papaemmanuil
Gunes Gundem
Adam Shlien
Niccolo Bolli
Sam Behjati
Patrick S Tarpey
Jyoti Nangalia
Charles E Massie
Adam P Butler
Jon W Teague
George S Vassiliou
Anthony R Green
Ming-Qing Du
Ashwin Unnikrishnan
John E Pimanda
Bin Tean Teh
Nikhil Munshi
Mel Greaves
Paresh Vyas
Adel K El-Naggar
Tom Santarius
V Peter Collins
Richard Grundy
Jack A Taylor
D Neil Hayes
David Malkin
ICGC Breast Cancer Group
ICGC Chronic Myeloid Disorders Group
ICGC Prostate Cancer Group
Christopher S Foster
Anne Y Warren
Hayley C Whitaker
Daniel Brewer
Rosalind Eeles
Colin Cooper
David Neal
Tapio Visakorpi
William B Isaacs
G Steven Bova
Adrienne M Flanagan
P Andrew Futreal
Andy G Lynch
Patrick F Chinnery
Ultan McDermott
Michael R Stratton
Peter J Campbell
Source :
eLife, Vol 3 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2014.

Abstract

Recent sequencing studies have extensively explored the somatic alterations present in the nuclear genomes of cancers. Although mitochondria control energy metabolism and apoptosis, the origins and impact of cancer-associated mutations in mtDNA are unclear. In this study, we analyzed somatic alterations in mtDNA from 1675 tumors. We identified 1907 somatic substitutions, which exhibited dramatic replicative strand bias, predominantly C > T and A > G on the mitochondrial heavy strand. This strand-asymmetric signature differs from those found in nuclear cancer genomes but matches the inferred germline process shaping primate mtDNA sequence content. A number of mtDNA mutations showed considerable heterogeneity across tumor types. Missense mutations were selectively neutral and often gradually drifted towards homoplasmy over time. In contrast, mutations resulting in protein truncation undergo negative selection and were almost exclusively heteroplasmic. Our findings indicate that the endogenous mutational mechanism has far greater impact than any other external mutagens in mitochondria and is fundamentally linked to mtDNA replication.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.97bb2e0fa0f4eb19b17cd3f405b0385
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02935