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Single-strand mismatch and damage patterns revealed by single-molecule DNA sequencing

Authors :
Mei Hong Liu
Benjamin Costa
Una Choi
Rachel C. Bandler
Emilie Lassen
Marta Grońska-Pęski
Adam Schwing
Zachary R. Murphy
Daniel Rosenkjær
Shany Picciotto
Vanessa Bianchi
Lucie Stengs
Melissa Edwards
Caitlin A. Loh
Tina K. Truong
Randall E. Brand
Tomi Pastinen
J. Richard Wagner
Anne-Bine Skytte
Uri Tabori
Jonathan E. Shoag
Gilad D. Evrony
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Mutations accumulate in the genome of every cell of the body throughout life, causing cancer and other genetic diseases1-4. Almost all of these mosaic mutations begin as nucleotide mismatches or damage in only one of the two strands of the DNA prior to becoming double-strand mutations if unrepaired or misrepaired5. However, current DNA sequencing technologies cannot resolve these initial single-strand events. Here, we developed a single-molecule, long-read sequencing method that achieves single-molecule fidelity for single-base substitutions when present in either one or both strands of the DNA. It also detects single-strand cytosine deamination events, a common type of DNA damage. We profiled 110 samples from diverse tissues, including from individuals with cancer-predisposition syndromes, and define the first single-strand mismatch and damage signatures. We find correspondences between these single-strand signatures and known double-strand mutational signatures, which resolves the identity of the initiating lesions. Tumors deficient in both mismatch repair and replicative polymerase proofreading show distinct single-strand mismatch patterns compared to samples deficient in only polymerase proofreading. In the mitochondrial genome, our findings support a mutagenic mechanism occurring primarily during replication. Since the double-strand DNA mutations interrogated by prior studies are only the endpoint of the mutation process, our approach to detect the initiating single-strand events at single-molecule resolution will enable new studies of how mutations arise in a variety of contexts, especially in cancer and aging.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....62a017ecd2fb5681067880bdc15a178e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.02.19.526140