Monitoring the rate and variability of somatic genomic alterations using long-read sequencing.

Publication Title

Sci Rep

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-11-2025

Keywords

Humans; Neoplasms; Whole Genome Sequencing; Male; Mutation; Female; Adult; Middle Aged; High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing; Genome, Human; Aged; Genomics; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; california; santa monica; sjci; genomics

Abstract

Cancer initiation occurs when a cell acquires and accumulates mutations in genes involved in the regulation of cell processes: each cell division throughout a person's life introduces novel mutations in the cells' DNA and under normal circumstances, the body is primed to prevent those from leading to cancer. Occasionally, a subset of those mutations escapes those safeguards and might eventually result in the emergence of the disease. To understand the dynamics of accumulation of somatic mutations, we have performed longitudinal whole genome sequencing of DNA obtained from whole blood from healthy individuals and cancer patients using Oxford Nanopore Technologies' Long Read Sequencing. Here we show that the number of somatic single nucleotide variants detected increases with their age and that for specific mutational processes, changes can be detected within months. We computed aggregated metrics for unique participants at each timepoint across types of variants (based on single based substitution molecular signatures) and identified patterns of change both over an individual's lifespan (age) and over the sampling period (months). This study showcases the suitability of long read sequencing of blood DNA for detecting coarse-grained differences over time and enable future development of "state of the system" personalized prevention programs.

Area of Special Interest

Cancer

Specialty/Research Institute

Oncology

DOI

10.1038/s41598-025-01690-z

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