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DNA base damage is a major source of oncogenic mutations. Such damage can produce strand-phased mutation patterns and multiallelic variation through the process of lesion segregation. Here we exploited these properties to reveal how strand-asymmetric processes, such as replication and transcription, shape DNA damage and repair. Despite distinct mechanisms of leading and lagging strand replication, we observe identical fidelity and damage tolerance for both strands. For small alkylation adducts of DNA, our results support a model in which the same translesion polymerase is recruited on-the-fly to both replication strands, starkly contrasting the strand asymmetric tolerance of bulky UV-induced adducts. The accumulation of multiple distinct mutations at the site of persistent lesions provides the means to quantify the relative efficiency of repair processes genome wide and at single-base resolution. At multiple scales, we show DNA damage-induced mutations are largely shaped by the influence of DNA accessibility on repair efficiency, rather than gradients of DNA damage. Finally, we reveal specific genomic conditions that can actively drive oncogenic mutagenesis by corrupting the fidelity of nucleotide excision repair. These results provide insight into how strand-asymmetric mechanisms underlie the formation, tolerance and repair of DNA damage, thereby shaping cancer genome evolution.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07490-1 | DOI Listing |
Toxicol Sci
September 2025
Department of Pharmacology, Rutgers University Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ, USA.
Neutrophils play a complex role in the pathogenesis of chronic liver disease and have been linked to both liver damage and injury resolution. Recent reports propose that neutrophils drive liver injury and fibrosis through the formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). This study tests the hypothesis that the enzyme peptidyl arginine deiminase-4 (PAD4) drives NET formation and liver fibrosis in experimental chronic liver injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Invest
September 2025
Department of Genetics, Research Institute of Environmental Medicine, Nagoya University, Nagoya, Japan.
Bull Environ Contam Toxicol
September 2025
Laboratorio de Ecotoxicología, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras (IIMYC), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata (CONICET- UNMDP), Dean Funes 3350, 7600, Mar del Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
The potential genotoxicity of the fungicide tebuconazole (TBZ) was evaluated in the freshwater fish Jenynsia lineata when exposed to 0.005, 0.05, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
September 2025
Department of Biosciences & Bioengineering, IIT Bombay, Mumbai 400076, India.
Embryonic stem cells (ESCs), which are susceptible to DNA damage, depend on a robust and highly efficient DNA damage response (DDR) mechanism for their survival. However, the implications of physical force-mediated DNA damage on ESC fate remain unclear. We show that stiffness-dependent spreading of mouse ESCs (mESCs) induces DNA damage through nuclear compression, with DNA damage causing differentiation through Lamin A/C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNucleic Acids Res
September 2025
Université Paris-Saclay, INRAE, AgroParisTech, Institut Jean-Pierre Bourgin for Plant Sciences (IJPB), 78000 Versailles, France.
BRCA2 is crucial for mediating homology-directed DNA repair (HDR) through its binding to single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) and the recombinases RAD51 and DMC1. Most BRCA2 orthologs have a canonical DNA-binding domain (DBD) with the exception of Drosophila melanogaster. It remains unclear whether such a noncanonical BRCA2 variant without DBD possesses a DNA-binding activity.
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