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  4. Ancient Genes Establish Stress-Induced Mutation as a Hallmark of Cancer
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Ancient Genes Establish Stress-Induced Mutation as a Hallmark of Cancer

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Title
Ancient Genes Establish Stress-Induced Mutation as a Hallmark of Cancer
Description

Cancer is sometimes depicted as a reversion to single cell behavior in cells adapted to live in a multicellular assembly. If this is the case, one would expect that mutation in cancer disrupts functional mechanisms that suppress cell-level traits detrimental to multicellularity. Such mechanisms should have evolved with or after the emergence of multicellularity. This leads to two related, but distinct hypotheses: 1) Somatic mutations in cancer will occur in genes that are younger than the emergence of multicellularity (1000 million years [MY]); and 2) genes that are frequently mutated in cancer and whose mutations are functionally important for the emergence of the cancer phenotype evolved within the past 1000 million years, and thus would exhibit an age distribution that is skewed to younger genes. In order to investigate these hypotheses we estimated the evolutionary ages of all human genes and then studied the probability of mutation and their biological function in relation to their age and genomic location for both normal germline and cancer contexts.

We observed that under a model of uniform random mutation across the genome, controlled for gene size, genes less than 500 MY were more frequently mutated in both cases. Paradoxically, causal genes, defined in the COSMIC Cancer Gene Census, were depleted in this age group. When we used functional enrichment analysis to explain this unexpected result we discovered that COSMIC genes with recessive disease phenotypes were enriched for DNA repair and cell cycle control. The non-mutated genes in these pathways are orthologous to those underlying stress-induced mutation in bacteria, which results in the clustering of single nucleotide variations. COSMIC genes were less common in regions where the probability of observing mutational clusters is high, although they are approximately 2-fold more likely to harbor mutational clusters compared to other human genes. Our results suggest this ancient mutational response to stress that evolved among prokaryotes was co-opted to maintain diversity in the germline and immune system, while the original phenotype is restored in cancer. Reversion to a stress-induced mutational response is a hallmark of cancer that allows for effectively searching “protected” genome space where genes causally implicated in cancer are located and underlies the high adaptive potential and concomitant therapeutic resistance that is characteristic of cancer.

Date Created
2017-04-25
Contributors
  • Cisneros, Luis (Author)
  • Bussey, Kimberly (Author)
  • Orr, Adam (Author)
  • Miocevic, Milica (Author)
  • Lineweaver, Charles H. (Author)
  • Davies, Paul (Author)
  • College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
  • BEYOND: Center for Fundamental Concepts in Science (Contributor)
  • College of Health Solutions (Contributor)
  • Department of Biomedical Informatics (Contributor)
  • School of Life Sciences (Contributor)
  • Department of Psychology (Contributor)
  • Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
  • Center for Biosignatures Discovery Automation (Contributor)
Resource Type
Text
Extent
22 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Reuse Permissions
Attribution
Primary Member of
ASU Regents' Professors Open Access Works
Identifier
Digital object identifier: 10.1371/journal.pone.0176258
Identifier Type
International standard serial number
Identifier Value
1045-3830
Identifier Type
International standard serial number
Identifier Value
1939-1560
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Series
PLOS ONE
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.44667
Preferred Citation

Cisneros, L., Bussey, K. J., Orr, A. J., Miočević, M., Lineweaver, C. H., & Davies, P. (2017). Ancient genes establish stress-induced mutation as a hallmark of cancer. Plos One, 12(4). doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0176258

Level of coding
minimal
Cataloging Standards
asu1
Note
The article is published at http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0176258
System Created
  • 2017-06-30 04:42:16
System Modified
  • 2021-08-19 11:33:36
  •     
  • 3 years 10 months ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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