Mutational Landscape of Normal Human Skin: Clues to Understanding Early-Stage Carcinogenesis in Keratinocyte Neoplasia

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Abstract

Normal skin contains numerous clones carrying cancer driver mutations. However, the mutational landscape of normal skin and its clonal relationship with skin cancer requires further elucidation. The aim of our study was to investigate the mutational landscape of normal human skin. We performed whole-exome sequencing using physiologically normal skin tissues and the matched peripheral blood (n = 39) and adjacent-matched skin cancers from a subset of patients (n = 10). Exposed skin harbored a median of 530 mutations (10.4/mb, range = 51–2,947), whereas nonexposed skin majorly exhibited significantly fewer mutations (median = 13, 0.25/mb, range = 1–166). Patient age was significantly correlated with the mutational burden. Mutations in six driver genes (NOTCH1, FAT1, TP53, PPM1D, KMT2D, and ASXL1) were identified. De novo mutational signature analysis identified a single signature with components of UV- and aging-related signatures. Normal skin harbored only three instances of copy-neutral loss of heterozygosity in 9q (n = 2) and 6q (n = 1). The mutational burden of normal skin was not correlated with that of matched skin cancers, and no protein-coding mutations were shared. In conclusion, we revealed the mutational landscape of normal skin, highlighting the role of driver genes in the malignant progression of normal skin.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1187-1196.e9
JournalJournal of Investigative Dermatology
Volume143
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2023

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