Human cancers express a mutator phenotype

被引:267
作者
Bielas, Jason H. [1 ]
Loeb, Keith R. [1 ]
Rubin, Brian P. [1 ]
True, Lawrence D. [1 ]
Loeb, Lawrence A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Dept Pathol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
关键词
genetic instability; random mutation frequency; umor heterogeneity; nucleotide instability (NIN); carcinogenesis;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0607057103
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Cancer cells contain numerous clonal mutations, i.e., mutations that are present in most or all malignant cells of a tumor and have presumably been selected because they confer a proliferative advantage. An important question is whether cancer cells also contain a large number of random mutations, i.e., randomly distributed unselected mutations that occur in only one or a few cells of a tumor. Such random mutations could contribute to the morphologic and functional heterogeneity of cancers and include mutations that confer resistance to therapy. We have postulated that malignant cells exhibit a mutator phenotype resulting in the generation of random mutations throughout the genome. We have recently developed an assay to quantify random mutations in human tissue with unprecedented sensitivity. Here, we report measurements of random sing le-nucleotide substitutions in normal and neoplastic human tissues. In normal tissues, the frequency of spontaneous random mutations is exceedingly low, less than 1 X 10(-8) per base pair. In contrast, tumors from the same individuals exhibited an average frequency of 210 x 10-8 per base pair, an elevation of at least two orders of magnitude. Our data document tumor heterogeneity at the single-nucleotide level, indicate that accelerated mutagenesis prevails late into tumor progression, and suggest that elevation of random mutation frequency in tumors might serve as a novel prognostic indicator.
引用
收藏
页码:18238 / 18242
页数:5
相关论文
共 35 条
[1]  
ALBERTINI RJ, 1990, ANNU REV GENET, V24, P305
[2]   Chromosome aberrations in solid tumors [J].
Albertson, DG ;
Collins, C ;
McCormick, F ;
Gray, JW .
NATURE GENETICS, 2003, 34 (04) :369-376
[3]   RAS GENES [J].
BARBACID, M .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOCHEMISTRY, 1987, 56 :779-827
[4]   Negative clonal selection in tumor evolution [J].
Beckman, RA ;
Loeb, LA .
GENETICS, 2005, 171 (04) :2123-2131
[5]   Quantification of random genomic mutations [J].
Bielas, JH ;
Loeb, LA .
NATURE METHODS, 2005, 2 (04) :285-290
[6]   Inflammation and cancer [J].
Coussens, LM ;
Werb, Z .
NATURE, 2002, 420 (6917) :860-867
[7]  
ESHLEMAN JR, 1995, ONCOGENE, V10, P33
[8]   A GENETIC MODEL FOR COLORECTAL TUMORIGENESIS [J].
FEARON, ER ;
VOGELSTEIN, B .
CELL, 1990, 61 (05) :759-767
[9]   THE HUMAN MUTATOR GENE HOMOLOG MSH2 AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH HEREDITARY NONPOLYPOSIS COLON-CANCER [J].
FISHEL, R ;
LESCOE, MK ;
RAO, MRS ;
COPELAND, NG ;
JENKINS, NA ;
GARBER, J ;
KANE, M ;
KOLODNER, R .
CELL, 1993, 75 (05) :1027-1038
[10]   A census of human cancer genes [J].
Futreal, PA ;
Coin, L ;
Marshall, M ;
Down, T ;
Hubbard, T ;
Wooster, R ;
Rahman, N ;
Stratton, MR .
NATURE REVIEWS CANCER, 2004, 4 (03) :177-183