posted on 2017-01-23, 14:00authored byAdeolu B. Adewoye, S. J. Lindsay, Yuri E. Dubrova, M. E. Hurles
The ability to predict the genetic consequences of human exposure to ionizing radiation has been a long-standing goal of human genetics in the past 50 years. Here we present the results of an unbiased, comprehensive genome-wide survey of the range of germline mutations induced in laboratory mice after parental exposure to ionizing radiation and show irradiation markedly alters the frequency and spectrum of de novo mutations. Here we show that the frequency of de novo copy number variants (CNVs) and insertion/deletion events (indels) is significantly elevated in offspring of exposed fathers. We also show that the spectrum of induced de novo single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) is strikingly different; with clustered mutations being significantly over-represented in the offspring of irradiated males. Our study highlights the specific classes of radiation-induced DNA lesions that evade repair and result in germline mutation and paves the way for similarly comprehensive characterizations of other germline mutagens.
Funding
We thank the Wellcome Trust for their support (WT091106 and WT098051).
History
Citation
Nature Communications, 2015, 6, pp. 6684-?
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Department of Genetics
Accession codes: The microarray data were deposited in the Gene Expression Omnibus
(GEO), submission number GSE65521; the whole-genome sequences were deposited in
the Sequence Read Archive under Study number ERP001221, with accession numbers
ERX111346, ERX111347, ERX111348, ERX111349, ERX111350, ERX111351,
ERX111352, ERX111353, ERX111354, ERX111355, ERX111356, ERX111357,
ERX111358, ERX111359, ERX111360, ERX111361, ERX111362, ERX111363,
ERX111364, ERX111365, ERX111366 and ERX111367.
Supplementary Information accompanies this paper at http://www.nature.com/naturecommunications