scholarly journals Trajectory and uniqueness of mutational signatures in yeast mutators

2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (40) ◽  
pp. 24947-24956 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sophie Loeillet ◽  
Mareike Herzog ◽  
Fabio Puddu ◽  
Patricia Legoix ◽  
Sylvain Baulande ◽  
...  

The acquisition of mutations plays critical roles in adaptation, evolution, senescence, and tumorigenesis. Massive genome sequencing has allowed extraction of specific features of many mutational landscapes but it remains difficult to retrospectively determine the mechanistic origin(s), selective forces, and trajectories of transient or persistent mutations and genome rearrangements. Here, we conducted a prospective reciprocal approach to inactivate 13 single or multiple evolutionary conserved genes involved in distinct genome maintenance processes and characterize de novo mutations in 274 diploid Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutation accumulation lines. This approach revealed the diversity, complexity, and ultimate uniqueness of mutational landscapes, differently composed of base substitutions, small insertions/deletions (InDels), structural variants, and/or ploidy variations. Several landscapes parallel the repertoire of mutational signatures in human cancers while others are either novel or composites of subsignatures resulting from distinct DNA damage lesions. Notably, the increase of base substitutions in the homologous recombination-deficient Rad51 mutant, specifically dependent on the Polζ translesion polymerase, yields COSMIC signature 3 observed in BRCA1/BRCA2-mutant breast cancer tumors. Furthermore, “mutome” analyses in highly polymorphic diploids and single-cell bottleneck lineages revealed a diverse spectrum of loss-of-heterozygosity (LOH) signatures characterized by interstitial and terminal chromosomal events resulting from interhomolog mitotic cross-overs. Following the appearance of heterozygous mutations, the strong stimulation of LOHs in the rad27/FEN1 and tsa1/PRDX1 backgrounds leads to fixation of homozygous mutations or their loss along the lineage. Overall, these mutomes and their trajectories provide a mechanistic framework to understand the origin and dynamics of genome variations that accumulate during clonal evolution.

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 491-491
Author(s):  
Joachim Kunz ◽  
Obul R Bandapalli ◽  
Tobias Rausch ◽  
Adrian Stuetz ◽  
Paulina Pechanska ◽  
...  

Abstract Precursor T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) represents one of the major challenges of pediatric oncology, because relapses are frequently refractory to treatment and fatal. The molecular understanding of progression to relapse in T-ALL is limited. We aimed at identifying patterns of clonal evolution and at describing mechanisms of relapse by comparing the genetic and epigenetic alterations in primary and in relapsed pediatric T-ALL. DNA from bone marrow of 13 patients with T-ALL at primary disease, remission and relapse was analyzed by a combination of multiplex ligation- dependent probe amplification (MLPA), Illumina 450k array, whole exome sequencing (WES) and targeted deep sequencing. Targeted deep sequencing was performed after target capture with Agilent HaloPlex. In the target capture design, all loci that showed somatic mutations in WES were included. Deep sequencing was done on all primary disease and relapse samples and on a subset of remission samples. Allele frequencies by HaloPlex were highly reproducible, corresponded well to allele frequencies of loci that were well covered in WES and were consistent after serial dilutions. Analysis of DNA methylation using the Illumina 450k array showed that methylation of relapse samples does not differ significantly from the methylation of the matching primary disease samples, with the variability between different patients being much larger than the variability within samples from the same patient. WES identified on average 10 single nucleotide variants (SNVs) and 1.8 small insertions and deletions (indels) in primary T-ALL and 23.2 SNVs and 2.6 indels in the corresponding relapse samples. Only about 30% of SNVs and indels identified in relapse were already detected in primary disease by WES, while most amplifications and deletions that had been detected by the combination of MLPA and read depth analysis of WES data were conserved from primary disease to relapse. Recurrently, we identified known and novel drivers of T-ALL (NOTCH1, FBXW7, PHF6, WT1, PTEN, NRAS, STAT5B). Targeted resequencing of mutated genes at high depth (median coverage 6233, 90% of targets covered >1000x) identified rare subclonal alleles with a sensitivity in the range of 10-2 to 10-4, depending on the coverage of each individual locus. This allowed us to distinguish de novo mutations that were acquired during treatment from mutations that had already been present at initial diagnosis and were selected for in relapse. Depending on the contribution of clonal selection or de novo mutations, at least two different patterns of relapse could be identified: In a smaller proportion of leukemias, all mutations present at first diagnosis were again detected in relapse, with some additional mutations that were specific for relapse. In most leukemias, the major clone at relapse had arisen from a minor subclone at primary disease and has acquired additional mutations, indicating that clonal selection was the main contributor to the evolution of relapse. In all cases, at least one genetic alteration was detected in samples from both time points. The example of activating mutations in the nucleotidase NT5C2, which have previously been proposed to contribute to resistance against nucleoside analogues, illustrates the genetic plasticity of T-ALL: Activating NT5C2 mutations were identified in 4 out of 13 relapse samples. The only activating NT5C2 mutation that was already detected in a primary disease sample at low allele frequency was not present in the corresponding relapse sample but was replaced by another activating NT5C2 mutation. This indicates that mutations acquired during treatment may outcompete subclonal mutations that were present in the primary leukemia. In at least two relapse samples, subclonal NT5C2 mutations were detected, compatible with the notion that acquisition of resistance towards chemotherapy by mutation of NT5C2 is a late event on the way to relapse. Conclusion: The acquisition of novel genetic alterations and selection of treatment resistant subclones are main contributors to T-ALL relapse. We now aim at identifying molecular signatures that characterize treatment resistant subclones, which may be included in risk stratification algorithms of primary T-ALL. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Álvaro Chiner-Oms ◽  
Mariana Gabriela López ◽  
Iñaki Comas

Genetic differences between different Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTBC) strains determine their ability to transmit within different host populations, their latency times, and their drug-resistance profiles. Said differences usually emerge through de novo mutations and are maintained or discarded by the balance of evolutionary forces. Using a dataset of ~5,000 strains representing global MTBC diversity, we determined the past and present selective forces that have shaped the current variability observed in the pathogen population. We identified regions that have evolved under changing types of selection since the time of the MTBC common ancestor. Our approach highlighted striking differences in the genome regions relevant for host-pathogen interaction and, in particular, suggested an adaptive role for the sensor protein of two-component systems. In addition, we applied our approach to successfully identify potential determinants of resistance to drugs administered as second-line tuberculosis treatments.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Evan Witt ◽  
Christopher B Langer ◽  
Li Zhao

Aging is a complex biological process which is accompanied by changes in gene expression and mutational load. In many species including humans, old fathers pass on more paternally-derived de novo mutations, however, the cellular basis and cell types driving this pattern are still unclear. To understand the root causes of this phenomenon, we performed single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) on testes from young and old male Drosophila, as well as genomic sequencing (DNA-seq) on somatic tissue from the same flies. We found that early germ cells from old and young flies have similar mutational loads, but older flies are less able to remove mutations during spermatogenesis. This indicates that germline mutations arise from primarily non-replicative factors, and that the increased mutational load of older males is due to differences in genome maintenance activities such as repairs to DNA damage. We also found that T>A mutations are enriched in older flies, and transcription-related enrichment terms are depleted in older males. Early spermatogenesis-enriched genes have lower dN/dS than late spermatogenesis-enriched genes, supporting the hypothesis that late spermatogenesis is the source of evolutionary innovation. This transcriptional disruption is reflected in the decreased expression of genome maintenance genes in early germ cells of older flies, as well as potentially aberrant transcription of transposable elements in the aging germline. Our results provide novel insights into the transcriptional and mutational signatures of the male germline.


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