4.8 Article

Signatures of TOP1 transcription-associated mutagenesis in cancer and germline

Journal

NATURE
Volume 602, Issue 7898, Pages 623-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04403-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Blood Cancer UK
  2. UK Medical Research Council Human Genetics Unit core grants [MC_UU_00007/5, MC_UU_00007/11]
  3. Edinburgh Clinical Academic Track PhD programme (Wellcome Trust) [204802/Z/16/Z]
  4. AACR-Amgen Fellowship in Clinical/Translational Cancer Research [21-40-11-NADE]
  5. CRUK Brain Tumour Centre of Excellence Award [C157/A27589]
  6. EKFS research grant [2019_A09]
  7. Wilhelm Sander-Stiftung [2019.046.1]
  8. CRUK programme grant [C20807/A2864]
  9. La Caixa Foundation [CLLEvolution-LCF/PR/HR17/52150017, HR17-00221]
  10. NERC [R8/H10/56]
  11. MRC [MR/K001744/1]
  12. BBSRC [BB/J004243/1]
  13. National Institute for Health Research
  14. NHS England
  15. Wellcome Trust
  16. Cancer Research UK
  17. Medical Research Council

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Transcription-associated mutagenesis plays an important role in human genome mutations. This study reveals an ID4 mutation signature associated with the activity of topoisomerase 1 (TOP1), which causes insertions and deletions in cancer and physiological settings.
The mutational landscape is shaped by many processes. Genic regions are vulnerable to mutation but are preferentially protected by transcription-coupled repair(1). In microorganisms, transcription has been demonstrated to be mutagenic(2,3); however, the impact of transcription-associated mutagenesis remains to be established in higher eukaryotes(4). Here we show that ID4-a cancer insertion-deletion (indel) mutation signature of unknown aetiology(5) characterized by short (2 to 5 base pair) deletions -is due to a transcription-associated mutagenesis process. We demonstrate that defective ribonucleotide excision repair in mammals is associated with the ID4 signature, with mutations occurring at a TNT sequence motif, implicating topoisomerase 1 (TOP1) activity at sites of genome-embedded ribonucleotides as a mechanistic basis. Such TOP1-mediated deletions occur somatically in cancer, and the ID-TOP1 signature is also found in physiological settings, contributing to genic de novo indel mutations in the germline. Thus, although topoisomerases protect against genome instability by relieving topological stress(6), their activity may also be an important source of mutations in the human genome.

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