4.7 Article

Duplex sequencing provides detailed characterization of mutation frequencies and spectra in the bone marrow of MutaMouse males exposed to procarbazine hydrochloride

Journal

ARCHIVES OF TOXICOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 8, Pages 2245-2259

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00204-023-03527-y

Keywords

Error-corrected sequencing; ecNGS; Genetic toxicology; Duplex sequencing; Mutagenesis; Transgenic rodent assay

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Duplex Sequencing (DS) is a high-accuracy DNA sequencing technology that has advantages over conventional mutagenicity assays. In this study, DS was used to analyze mutations induced by procarbazine (PRC) in mouse bone marrow. DS detected significant increases in mutation frequencies and changes to mutation spectra at different PRC doses, demonstrating its superiority over classical mutagenicity assays.
Mutagenicity testing is an essential component of health safety assessment. Duplex Sequencing (DS), an emerging high-accuracy DNA sequencing technology, may provide substantial advantages over conventional mutagenicity assays. DS could be used to eliminate reliance on standalone reporter assays and provide mechanistic information alongside mutation frequency (MF) data. However, the performance of DS must be thoroughly assessed before it can be routinely implemented for standard testing. We used DS to study spontaneous and procarbazine (PRC)-induced mutations in the bone marrow (BM) of MutaMouse males across a panel of 20 diverse genomic targets. Mice were exposed to 0, 6.25, 12.5, or 25 mg/kg-bw/day for 28 days by oral gavage and BM sampled 42 days post-exposure. Results were compared with those obtained using the conventional lacZ viral plaque assay on the same samples. DS detected significant increases in mutation frequencies and changes to mutation spectra at all PRC doses. Low intra-group variability within DS samples allowed for detection of increases at lower doses than the lacZ assay. While the lacZ assay initially yielded a higher fold-change in mutant frequency than DS, inclusion of clonal mutations in DS mutation frequencies reduced this discrepancy. Power analyses suggested that three animals per dose group and 500 million duplex base pairs per sample is sufficient to detect a 1.5-fold increase in mutations with > 80% power. Overall, we demonstrate several advantages of DS over classical mutagenicity assays and provide data to support efforts to identify optimal study designs for the application of DS as a regulatory test.

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