RRC ID 77994
Author Gelova SP, Doherty KN, Alasmar S, Chan K.
Title Intrinsic base substitution patterns in diverse species reveal links to cancer and metabolism.
Journal Genetics
Abstract Analyses of large-scale cancer sequencing data have revealed that mutagenic processes can create distinctive patterns of base substitutions, called mutational signatures. Interestingly, mutational patterns resembling some of these signatures can also be observed in normal cells. To determine whether similar patterns exist more generally, we analyzed large data sets of genetic variation, including mutations from 7 model species and single nucleotide polymorphisms in 42 species, totaling >1.9 billion variants. We found that base substitution patterns for most species closely match single base substitution (SBS) mutational signature 5 in the Catalog of Somatic Mutations in Cancer (COSMIC) database. SBS5 is ubiquitous in cancers and also present in normal human cells, suggesting that similar patterns of genetic variation across so many species are likely due to conserved biochemistry. We investigated the mechanistic origins of the SBS5-like mutational pattern in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and show that translesion DNA synthesis and sugar metabolism are directly linked to this form of mutagenesis. We propose that conserved metabolic processes in cells are coupled to continuous generation of genetic variants, which can be acted upon by selection to drive the evolution of biological entities.
Volume 222(3)
Published 2022-11-1
DOI 10.1093/genetics/iyac144
PII 6712319
PMID 36149294
PMC PMC9630983
MeSH DNA Repair DNA Replication Humans Mutagenesis Mutation Neoplasms* / genetics Saccharomyces cerevisiae / genetics
IF 4.015
Resource
Yeast BYP7431