Origins and functional consequences of somatic mitochondrial DNA mutations in human cancer

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Recent sequencing studies have extensively explored the somatic alterations present in the nuclear genomes of cancers. Although mitochondria control energy metabolism and apoptosis, the origins and impact of cancer-associated mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) are unclear. Here, we analysed somatic alterations in mtDNA from 1,675 tumors across 31 histologies. We identified 1,907 somatic substitutions, which exhibited dramatic replicative strand bias, predominantly C>T and A>G on the mitochondrial heavy strand. This strand-asymmetric signature differs from those found in nuclear cancer genomes but matches the inferred germline process shaping primate mtDNA sequence content. Numbers of mtDNA mutations showed considerable heterogeneity across tumor types. Missense mutations were selectively neutral and often gradually drifted towards homoplasmy over time. In contrast, mutations resulting in protein truncation undergo negative selection and were almost exclusively heteroplasmic. Our findings indicate that the endogenous mutational mechanism has far greater impact than any other external mutagens in mitochondria, and is fundamentally linked to mtDNA replication.
Publisher
ELIFE SCIENCES PUBLICATIONS LTD
Issue Date
2014-10
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

ELIFE, v.3

ISSN
2050-084X
DOI
10.7554/eLife.02935
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/207027
Appears in Collection
MSE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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