The Mutation Rate and Cancer
Open Access
- 1 April 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Genetics
- Vol. 148 (4) , 1483-1490
- https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/148.4.1483
Abstract
The stability of the human genome requires that mutations in the germ line be exceptionally rare events. While most mutations are neutral or have deleterious effects, a limited number of mutations are required for adaptation to environmental changes. Drake has provided evidence that DNA-based microbes have evolved a mechanism to yield a common spontaneous mutation rate of ~0.003 mutations per genome per replication ( Drake 1991). In contrast, mutation rates of RNA viruses are much larger ( Holland et al. 1982) and can approach the maximum tolerable deleterious mutation rate of one per genome ( Eigen and Schuster 1977; Eigen 1993). Drake calculates that lytic RNA viruses display spontaneous mutation rates of approximately one per genome while most have mutation rates that are approximately 0.1 per genome ( Drake 1993). This constancy of germline mutation rates among microbial species need not necessarily mean constancy of the somatic mutation rates. Furthermore, there need not be a constant rate for somatic mutations during development. In this review, we consider mutations in cancer, a pathology in which there appears to be an increase in the rate of somatic mutations throughout the genome. Moreover, within the eukaryotic genome, as in microbes, there are “hot-spots” that exhibit unusually high mutation frequencies. It seems conceivable to us that many tumors contain thousands of changes in DNA sequence. The major question is: how do these mutations arise, and how many are rate-limiting for tumor progression?Keywords
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