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Increased somatic mutation burdens in normal human cells due to defective DNA polymerases.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Palles, Claire 
Mitchell, Emily 

Abstract

Mutation accumulation in somatic cells contributes to cancer development and is proposed as a cause of aging. DNA polymerases Pol ε and Pol δ replicate DNA during cell division. However, in some cancers, defective proofreading due to acquired POLE/POLD1 exonuclease domain mutations causes markedly elevated somatic mutation burdens with distinctive mutational signatures. Germline POLE/POLD1 mutations cause familial cancer predisposition. Here, we sequenced normal tissue and tumor DNA from individuals with germline POLE/POLD1 mutations. Increased mutation burdens with characteristic mutational signatures were found in normal adult somatic cell types, during early embryogenesis and in sperm. Thus human physiology can tolerate ubiquitously elevated mutation burdens. Except for increased cancer risk, individuals with germline POLE/POLD1 mutations do not exhibit overt features of premature aging. These results do not support a model in which all features of aging are attributable to widespread cell malfunction directly resulting from somatic mutation burdens accrued during life.

Description

Funder: Wellcome PhD Studentship


Funder: Jean Shank/Pathological Society Intermediate Fellowship


Funder: Wellcome Clinical PhD fellowship

Keywords

Adolescent, Adult, Aged, DNA Polymerase II, DNA Polymerase III, Embryonic Development, Genome, Human, Germ-Line Mutation, Humans, Intestinal Neoplasms, Intestines, Middle Aged, Mutagenesis, Phylogeny, Stem Cells, Young Adult

Journal Title

Nat Genet

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1061-4036
1546-1718

Volume Title

53

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
Cancer Research UK (C66259/A27114)
Wellcome Trust (206194)