Mutational processes of tobacco smoking and APOBEC activity generate protein-truncating mutations in cancer genomes

Author:

Adler Nina1ORCID,Bahcheli Alexander T.12ORCID,Cheng Kevin C. L.13,Al-Zahrani Khalid N.4ORCID,Slobodyanyuk Mykhaylo13ORCID,Pellegrina Diogo1ORCID,Schramek Daniel24ORCID,Reimand Jüri123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Computational Biology Program, Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, Toronto, ON, Canada.

2. Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

3. Department of Medical Biophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.

4. Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada.

Abstract

Mutational signatures represent a genomic footprint of endogenous and exogenous mutational processes through tumor evolution. However, their functional impact on the proteome remains incompletely understood. We analyzed the protein-coding impact of single-base substitution (SBS) signatures in 12,341 cancer genomes from 18 cancer types. Stop-gain mutations (SGMs) (i.e., nonsense mutations) were strongly enriched in SBS signatures of tobacco smoking, APOBEC cytidine deaminases, and reactive oxygen species. These mutational processes alter specific trinucleotide contexts and thereby substitute serines and glutamic acids with stop codons. SGMs frequently affect cancer hallmark pathways and tumor suppressors such as TP53 , FAT1 , and APC . Tobacco-driven SGMs in lung cancer correlate with smoking history and highlight a preventable determinant of these harmful mutations. APOBEC-driven SGMs are enriched in YTCA motifs and associate with APOBEC3A expression. Our study exposes SGM expansion as a genetic mechanism by which endogenous and carcinogenic mutational processes directly contribute to protein loss of function, oncogenesis, and tumor heterogeneity.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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