Researchers have provided the first
comprehensive compendium of mutational processes that drive tumour
development. Together, these mutational processes explain most mutations
found in 30 of the most common cancer types. This new understanding of
cancer development could help to treat and prevent a wide-range of
cancers.
Each mutational process leaves a
particular pattern of mutations, an imprint or signature, in the genomes
of cancers it has caused. By studying 7,042 genomes of people with the
most common forms of cancer, the team uncovered more than 20 signatures
of processes that mutate DNA. For many of the signatures, they also
identified the underlying biological process responsible.
All cancers are caused by mutations in
DNA occurring in cells of the body during a person’s lifetime. Although
we know that chemicals in tobacco smoke cause mutations in lung cells
that lead to lung cancers and ultraviolet light causes mutations in skin
cells that lead to skin cancers, we have remarkably little
understanding of the biological processes that cause the mutations which
are responsible for the development of most cancers.
“We have identified the majority of the
mutational signatures that explain the genetic development and history
of cancers in patients,” says Ludmil Alexandrov first author from the
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute. “We are now beginning to understand the
complicated biological processes that occur over time and leave these
residual mutational signatures on cancer genomes.”
All of the cancers contained two or more
signatures, reflecting the variety of processes that work together
during the development of cancer. However, different cancers have
different numbers of mutational processes. For example, two mutational
processes underlie the development of ovarian cancer, while six
mutational processes underlie the development of liver cancer.
Some of the mutational signatures are
found in multiple cancer types, while others are confined to a single
cancer type. Out of the 30 cancer types, 25 had signatures arising from
age-related mutational processes. Another signature, caused by defects
in repairing DNA due to mutations in the breast cancer susceptibility
genes BRCA1 and 2, was found in breast, ovarian and pancreatic cancers.
“Through detailed analysis, we can start
to use the overwhelming amounts of information buried deep in the DNA
of cancers to our advantage in terms of understanding how and why
cancers arise,”says Dr Serena Nik-Zainal, author from the Wellcome Trust
Sanger Institute. “Our map of the events that cause the majority of
cancers in humans is an important step to discovering the processes that
drive cancer formation.”
The team found that a family of enzymes,
which is known to ‘edit’ (ie mutate) DNA, was linked to more than half
of the cancer types. These enzymes, known as APOBECs, can be activated
in response to viral infections. It may be that the resulting signatures
are collateral damage on the human genome caused by the enzymes’
actions to protect cells from viruses.
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