APOBEC affects tumor evolution and age at onset of lung cancer in smokers

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Abstract

Most solid tumors harbor somatic mutations attributed to off-target activities of APOBEC3A (A3A) and/or APOBEC3B (A3B). However, how APOBEC3A/B enzymes affect tumor evolution in the presence of exogenous mutagenic processes is largely unknown. Here, multi-omics profiling of 309 lung cancers from smokers identifies two subtypes defined by low (LAS) and high (HAS) APOBEC mutagenesis. LAS are enriched for A3B-like mutagenesis and KRAS mutations; HAS for A3A-like mutagenesis and TP53 mutations. Compared to LAS, HAS have older age at onset and high proportions of newly generated progenitor-like cells likely due to the combined tobacco smoking- and APOBEC3A-associated DNA damage and apoptosis. Consistently, HAS exhibit high expression of pulmonary healing signaling pathway, stemness markers, distal cell-of-origin, more neoantigens, slower clonal expansion, but no smoking-associated genomic/epigenomic changes. With validation in 184 lung tumor samples, these findings show how heterogeneity in mutational burden across co-occurring mutational processes and cell types contributes to tumor development.

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Zhang, T., Sang, J., Hoang, P. H., Zhao, W., Rosenbaum, J., Johnson, K. E., … Landi, M. T. (2025). APOBEC affects tumor evolution and age at onset of lung cancer in smokers. Nature Communications , 16(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-59923-8

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