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  4. Fetal-juvenile origins of point mutations in the adult human tracheal-bronchial epithelium: Absence of detectable effects of age, gender or smoking status
 
research article

Fetal-juvenile origins of point mutations in the adult human tracheal-bronchial epithelium: Absence of detectable effects of age, gender or smoking status

Sudo, Hiroko
•
Li-Sucholeiki, Xiao-Cheng
•
Marcelino, Luisa A.
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2008
Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis

Allele-specific mismatch amplification mutation assays (MAMA) of anatomically distinct sectors of the upper bronchial tracts of nine nonsmokers revealed many numerically dispersed clusters of the point mutations C742T, G746T, G747T of the TP53 gene, G35T of the KRAS gene and G508A of the HPRT1 gene. Assays of these five mutations in six smokers have yielded quantitatively similar results. One hundred and eighty four micro-anatomical sectors of 0.5-6 x 10(6) tracheal-bronchial epithelial cells represented en toto the equivalent of approximately 1.7 human smokers' bronchial trees to the fifth bifurcation. Statistically significant mutant copy numbers above the 95% upper confidence limits of historical background controls were found in 198 of 425 sector assays. No significant differences (P = 0.1) for negative sector fractions, mutant fractions, distributions of mutant cluster size or anatomical positions were observed for smoking status, gender or age (38-76 year). Based on the modal cluster size of mitochondrial point mutants, the size of the adult bronchial epithelial maintenance turnover unit was estimated to be about 32 cells. When data from all 15 lungs were combined the log 2 of nuclear mutant cluster size plotted against log 2 of the number of clusters of a given cluster size displayed a slope of similar to 1.1 over a range of cluster sizes from similar to 2(6) to 215 mutant copies. A parsimonious interpretation of these nuclear and previously reported data for lung epithelial mitochondrial point mutant clusters is that they arose from mutations in stem cells at a high but constant rate per stem cell doubling during at least ten stem cell doublings of the later fetal-juvenile period. The upper and lower decile range of summed point mutant fractions among lungs was about 7.5-fold, suggesting an important source of stratification in the population with regard to risk of tumor initiation.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.mrfmmm.2008.08.016
Web of Science ID

WOS:000261295600004

Author(s)
Sudo, Hiroko
Li-Sucholeiki, Xiao-Cheng
Marcelino, Luisa A.
Gruhl, Amanda N.
Herrero-Jimenez, Pablo
Zarbl, Helmut
Willey, James C.
Furth, Emma E.
Morgenthaler, Stephan  
Coller, Hilary A.
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Date Issued

2008

Published in
Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis
Volume

646

Start page

25

End page

40

Subjects

Mutation

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Lung

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Fetal-juvenile

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Smoking

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Age

•

Gender

•

Iarc P53 Database

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Lung-Cancer

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Cigarette-Smoking

•

Mitochondrial-Dna

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Somatic Mutation

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Peripheral-Blood

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Gene-Mutations

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Colon-Cancer

•

Human-Cells

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Stem-Cells

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
STAP  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/60789
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