4.6 Article

The Impact of Environmental and Endogenous Damage on Somatic Mutation Load in Human Skin Fibroblasts

Journal

PLOS GENETICS
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1006385

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Institute of Health Intramural Research Program [Z1AES103266]
  2. NIH from NIEHS [R00E5022633-03]
  3. Breast Cancer Research Program Breakthrough Award from the Department of Defense [BC141727]
  4. Center for Disease Control/ National Institute of Occupational Health and Safety [R21 -OH010550]
  5. NIH [1U01MH106883]
  6. Eleanor and Miles Shore Fellowship
  7. William Randolph Hearst Fund

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Accumulation of somatic changes, due to environmental and endogenous lesions, in the human genome is associated with aging and cancer. Understanding the impacts of these processes on mutagenesis is fundamental to understanding the etiology, and improving the prognosis and prevention of cancers and other genetic diseases. Previous methods relying on either the generation of induced pluripotent stem cells, or sequencing of single-cell genomes were inherently error-prone and did not allow independent validation of the mutations. In the current study we eliminated these potential sources of error by high coverage genome sequencing of single-cell derived clonal fibroblast lineages, obtained after minimal propagation in culture, prepared from skin biopsies of two healthy adult humans. We report here accurate measurement of genome-wide magnitude and spectra of mutations accrued in skin fibroblasts of healthy adult humans. We found that every cell contains at least one chromosomal rearrangement and 600-13,000 base substitutions. The spectra and correlation of base substitutions with epigenomic features resemble many cancers. Moreover, because biopsies were taken from body parts differing by sun exposure, we can delineate the precise contributions of environmental and endogenous factors to the accrual of genetic changes within the same individual. We show here that UV-induced and endogenous DNA damage can have a comparable impact on the somatic mutation loads in skin fibroblasts.

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