Abstract
AbstractRecent studies by Tomasetti et al. revealed that the risk disparity among different types of cancer is mainly determined by inherent patterns in DNA replication errors rather than environmental factors. In this study we reveal that inherent patterns of DNA mutations plays a similar role in cancer at the molecular level. Cancer results from stochastic DNA mutations, yet non-random patterns of cancer mutations emerge when we look across hundreds of cancer genomes. Over 500 cancer genes have been identified to date as the hot spot genes of cancer mutations. It is generally believed that these gene are mutated more frequently because they reside in functionally important pathways and are hence selected during the somatic evolution process of tumor progression. This theory however does not explain why many genes in the same pathways of cancer genes are not mutated in cancer. In this study, we challenge this view by showing that the inherent patterns of spontaneous mutations of human genes not only distinguish cancer causing genes and non-cancer genes but also shapes the mutation profile of cancer genes at the sub-gene level.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory