Rates and Patterns of Clonal Oncogenic Mutations in the Normal Human Brain

  • Javier Ganz
  • , Eduardo A. Maury
  • , Basheer Becerra
  • , Sara Bizzotto
  • , Ryan N. Doan
  • , Connor J. Kenny
  • , Taehwan Shin
  • , Junho Kim
  • , Zinan Zhou
  • , Keith L. Ligon
  • , Eunjung Alice Lee
  • , Christopher A. Walsh

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations

Abstract

Although oncogenic mutations have been found in nondiseased, proliferative nonneural tissues, their prevalence in the human brain is unknown. Targeted sequencing of genes implicated in brain tumors in 418 samples derived from 110 individuals of varying ages, without tumor diagnoses, detected oncogenic somatic single-nucleotide variants (sSNV) in 5.4% of the brains, including IDH1R132H. These mutations were largely present in subcortical white matter and enriched in glial cells and, surprisingly, were less common in older individuals. A depletion of high-allele frequency sSNVs representing macroscopic clones with age was replicated by analysis of bulk RNA sequencing data from 1,816 nondiseased brain samples ranging from fetal to old age. We also describe large clonal copy number variants and that sSNVs show mutational signatures resembling those found in gliomas, suggesting that mutational processes of the normal brain drive early glial oncogenesis. This study helps understand the origin and early evolution of brain tumors.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)172-185
Number of pages14
JournalCancer Discovery
Volume12
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2022
Externally publishedYes

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