The landscape of somatic mutation in normal colorectal epithelial cells

Published: 16 August 2019| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/zv6xrjxftw.1
Contributors:
Henry Lee-Six,

Description

Data to support the manuscript "The landscape of somatic mutation in normal colorectal epithelial cells", published in Nature in 2019. Abstract: The colorectal adenoma-carcinoma sequence has provided a paradigmatic framework for understanding the successive somatic genetic changes and consequent clonal expansions leading to cancer. As for most cancer types, however, understanding of the earliest phases of colorectal neoplastic change, which may occur in morphologically normal tissue, is comparatively limited. Here, we whole genome sequenced hundreds of normal crypts from 42 individuals. Signatures of multiple mutational processes were revealed, some ubiquitous and continuous, others only found in some individuals, in some crypts or during certain periods of life. Likely driver mutations were present in ~1% of normal colorectal crypts in middle-aged individuals, indicating that adenomas and carcinomas are rare outcomes of a pervasive process of neoplastic change across morphologically normal colorectal epithelium. Colorectal cancers exhibit substantially elevated mutation burdens relative to normal cells. Sequencing normal colorectal cells provides quantitative insights into the genomic and clonal evolution of cancer.

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Please see article "The landscape of somatic mutation in normal colorectal epithelial cells", published in Nature in 2019.

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Wellcome Sanger Institute, University of Cambridge

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