| Literature DB >> 26806129 |
Nicholas J Haradhvala1, Paz Polak2, Petar Stojanov3, Kyle R Covington4, Eve Shinbrot4, Julian M Hess5, Esther Rheinbay1, Jaegil Kim5, Yosef E Maruvka1, Lior Z Braunstein5, Atanas Kamburov2, Philip C Hanawalt6, David A Wheeler4, Amnon Koren7, Michael S Lawrence8, Gad Getz9.
Abstract
Mutational processes constantly shape the somatic genome, leading to immunity, aging, cancer, and other diseases. When cancer is the outcome, we are afforded a glimpse into these processes by the clonal expansion of the malignant cell. Here, we characterize a less explored layer of the mutational landscape of cancer: mutational asymmetries between the two DNA strands. Analyzing whole-genome sequences of 590 tumors from 14 different cancer types, we reveal widespread asymmetries across mutagenic processes, with transcriptional ("T-class") asymmetry dominating UV-, smoking-, and liver-cancer-associated mutations and replicative ("R-class") asymmetry dominating POLE-, APOBEC-, and MSI-associated mutations. We report a striking phenomenon of transcription-coupled damage (TCD) on the non-transcribed DNA strand and provide evidence that APOBEC mutagenesis occurs on the lagging-strand template during DNA replication. As more genomes are sequenced, studying and classifying their asymmetries will illuminate the underlying biological mechanisms of DNA damage and repair.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26806129 PMCID: PMC4753048 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.12.050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582