4.8 Article

Tobacco smoking and somatic mutations in human bronchial epithelium

期刊

NATURE
卷 578, 期 7794, 页码 266-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-1961-1

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资金

  1. Cancer Research UK Grand Challenge Award [C98/A24032]
  2. Wellcome Trust
  3. UK Regenerative Medicine Platform (UKRMP2) Engineered Cell Environment Hub (MRC) [MR/R015635/1]
  4. Longfonds BREATH lung regeneration consortium
  5. Rosetrees Trust
  6. Stoneygate Trust
  7. British Lung Foundation
  8. UCLH Charitable Foundation
  9. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Overseas Research Fellowship
  10. Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical and Pharmaceutical Research
  11. Roy Castle Lung Cancer Foundation
  12. Cancer Research UK [C57387/A21777]
  13. MRC [MR/K017047/1, G108/596, MR/R015635/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Tobacco smoking causes lung cancer(1-3), a process that is driven by more than 60 carcinogens in cigarette smoke that directly damage and mutate DNA(4,5). The profound effects of tobacco on the genome of lung cancer cells are well-documented(6-10), but equivalent data for normal bronchial cells are lacking. Here we sequenced whole genomes of 632 colonies derived from single bronchial epithelial cells across 16 subjects. Tobacco smoking was the major influence on mutational burden, typically adding from 1,000 to 10,000 mutations per cell; massively increasing the variance both within and between subjects; and generating several distinct mutational signatures of substitutions and of insertions and deletions. A population of cells in individuals with a history of smoking had mutational burdens that were equivalent to those expected for people who had never smoked: these cells had less damage from tobacco-specific mutational processes, were fourfold more frequent in ex-smokers than current smokers and had considerably longer telomeres than their more-mutated counterparts. Driver mutations increased in frequency with age, affecting 4-14% of cells in middle-aged subjects who had never smoked. In current smokers, at least 25% of cells carried driver mutations and 0-6% of cells had two or even three drivers. Thus, tobacco smoking increases mutational burden, cell-to-cell heterogeneity and driver mutations, but quitting promotes replenishment of the bronchial epithelium from mitotically quiescent cells that have avoided tobacco mutagenesis.

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