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Somatic mutations reveal widespread mosaicism and mutagenesis in human placentas

Authors :
Thomas R. W. Oliver
Emma Cook
Peter J. Campbell
Gordon C. S. Smith
Matthew D. Young
D. Stephen Charnock-Jones
Rashesh Sanghvi
Neil J. Sebire
Raheleh Rahbari
Ulla Sovio
Tim H. H. Coorens
Sam Behjati
Muzlifah Haniffa
Roser Vento-Tormo
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Clinical investigations of human fetuses have revealed that placentas occasionally harbour chromosomal aberrations that are absent from the fetus1. The basis of this genetic segregation of the placenta, termed confined placental mosaicism, remains unknown. Here, we investigated the phylogeny of human placentas reconstructed from somatic mutations, using whole genome sequencing of 86 placental biopsies and of 106 microdissections. We found that every placental biopsy represented a clonal expansion that is genetically distinct. Biopsies exhibited a genomic landscape akin to childhood cancer, in terms of mutation burden and mutational imprints. Furthermore, unlike any other human normal tissue studied to date, placental genomes commonly harboured copy number changes. Reconstructing phylogenetic relationships between tissues from the same pregnancy, revealed that developmental bottlenecks confined placental tissues, by separating trophectodermal from inner cell mass-derived lineages. Of particular note were cases in which inner cell mass-derived and placental lineages fully segregated within a few cell divisions of the zygote. Such early embryonic bottlenecks may enable the normalisation of zygotic aneuploidy. We observed direct evidence for this in a case of mosaic trisomic rescue. Our findings reveal cancer-like mutagenesis in placental tissues and portray confined mosaicism as the normal outcome of placental development.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9209544b4259e7b4ef0c31cd5fb15548
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.01.26.428217