Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Dmitry A. Gordenin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Dmitry A. Gordenin.


Nature | 2013

Mutational heterogeneity in cancer and the search for new cancer-associated genes.

Michael S. Lawrence; Petar Stojanov; Paz Polak; Gregory V. Kryukov; Kristian Cibulskis; Andrey Sivachenko; Scott L. Carter; Chip Stewart; Craig H. Mermel; Steven A. Roberts; Adam Kiezun; Peter S. Hammerman; Aaron McKenna; Yotam Drier; Lihua Zou; Alex H. Ramos; Trevor J. Pugh; Nicolas Stransky; Elena Helman; Jaegil Kim; Carrie Sougnez; Lauren Ambrogio; Elizabeth Nickerson; Erica Shefler; Maria L. Cortes; Daniel Auclair; Gordon Saksena; Douglas Voet; Michael S. Noble; Daniel DiCara

Major international projects are underway that are aimed at creating a comprehensive catalogue of all the genes responsible for the initiation and progression of cancer. These studies involve the sequencing of matched tumour–normal samples followed by mathematical analysis to identify those genes in which mutations occur more frequently than expected by random chance. Here we describe a fundamental problem with cancer genome studies: as the sample size increases, the list of putatively significant genes produced by current analytical methods burgeons into the hundreds. The list includes many implausible genes (such as those encoding olfactory receptors and the muscle protein titin), suggesting extensive false-positive findings that overshadow true driver events. We show that this problem stems largely from mutational heterogeneity and provide a novel analytical methodology, MutSigCV, for resolving the problem. We apply MutSigCV to exome sequences from 3,083 tumour–normal pairs and discover extraordinary variation in mutation frequency and spectrum within cancer types, which sheds light on mutational processes and disease aetiology, and in mutation frequency across the genome, which is strongly correlated with DNA replication timing and also with transcriptional activity. By incorporating mutational heterogeneity into the analyses, MutSigCV is able to eliminate most of the apparent artefactual findings and enable the identification of genes truly associated with cancer.


Nature Genetics | 2013

An APOBEC cytidine deaminase mutagenesis pattern is widespread in human cancers

Steven A. Roberts; Michael S. Lawrence; Leszek J. Klimczak; Sara A. Grimm; David C. Fargo; Petar Stojanov; Adam Kiezun; Gregory V. Kryukov; Scott L. Carter; Gordon Saksena; Shawn Harris; Ruchir Shah; Michael A. Resnick; Gad Getz; Dmitry A. Gordenin

Recent studies indicate that a subclass of APOBEC cytidine deaminases, which convert cytosine to uracil during RNA editing and retrovirus or retrotransposon restriction, may induce mutation clusters in human tumors. We show here that throughout cancer genomes APOBEC-mediated mutagenesis is pervasive and correlates with APOBEC mRNA levels. Mutation clusters in whole-genome and exome data sets conformed to the stringent criteria indicative of an APOBEC mutation pattern. Applying these criteria to 954,247 mutations in 2,680 exomes from 14 cancer types, mostly from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), showed a significant presence of the APOBEC mutation pattern in bladder, cervical, breast, head and neck, and lung cancers, reaching 68% of all mutations in some samples. Within breast cancer, the HER2-enriched subtype was clearly enriched for tumors with the APOBEC mutation pattern, suggesting that this type of mutagenesis is functionally linked with cancer development. The APOBEC mutation pattern also extended to cancer-associated genes, implying that ubiquitous APOBEC-mediated mutagenesis is carcinogenic.


Nature Genetics | 2003

Cadmium is a mutagen that acts by inhibiting mismatch repair

Yong Hwan Jin; Alan B. Clark; Robbert J.C. Slebos; Hanan Al-Refai; Jack A. Taylor; Thomas A. Kunkel; Michael A. Resnick; Dmitry A. Gordenin

Most errors that arise during DNA replication can be corrected by DNA polymerase proofreading or by post-replication mismatch repair (MMR). Inactivation of both mutation-avoidance systems results in extremely high mutability that can lead to error catastrophe. High mutability and the likelihood of cancer can be caused by mutations and epigenetic changes that reduce MMR. Hypermutability can also be caused by external factors that directly inhibit MMR. Identifying such factors has important implications for understanding the role of the environment in genome stability. We found that chronic exposure of yeast to environmentally relevant concentrations of cadmium, a known human carcinogen, can result in extreme hypermutability. The mutation specificity along with responses in proofreading-deficient and MMR-deficient mutants indicate that cadmium reduces the capacity for MMR of small misalignments and base-base mismatches. In extracts of human cells, cadmium inhibited at least one step leading to mismatch removal. Together, our data show that a high level of genetic instability can result from environmental impediment of a mutation-avoidance system.


Molecular Cell | 2008

Division of labor at the eukaryotic replication fork.

Stephanie A. Nick McElhinny; Dmitry A. Gordenin; Carrie M. Stith; Peter M. J. Burgers; Thomas A. Kunkel

DNA polymerase delta (Pol delta) and DNA polymerase epsilon (Pol epsilon) are both required for efficient replication of the nuclear genome, yet the division of labor between these enzymes has remained unclear for many years. Here we investigate the contribution of Pol delta to replication of the leading and lagging strand templates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae using a mutant Pol delta allele (pol3-L612M) whose error rate is higher for one mismatch (e.g., T x dGTP) than for its complement (A x dCTP). We find that strand-specific mutation rates strongly depend on the orientation of a reporter gene relative to an adjacent replication origin, in a manner implying that >90% of Pol delta replication is performed using the lagging strand template. When combined with recent evidence implicating Pol epsilon in leading strand replication, these data support a model of the replication fork wherein the leading and lagging strand templates are primarily copied by Pol epsilon and Pol delta, respectively.


Cell | 2002

The Mre11 Complex Is Required for Repair of Hairpin-Capped Double-Strand Breaks and Prevention of Chromosome Rearrangements

Kirill S. Lobachev; Dmitry A. Gordenin; Michael A. Resnick

Inverted repeats (IRs) that can form a hairpin or cruciform structure are common in the human genome and may be sources of instability. An IR involving the human Alu sequence (Alu-IR) has been studied as a model of such structures in yeast. We found that an Alu-IR is a mitotic recombination hotspot requiring MRE11/RAD50/XRS2 and SAE2. Using a newly developed approach for mapping rare double-strand breaks (DSBs), we established that induction of recombination results from breaks that are terminated by hairpins. Failure of the mre11, rad50, xrs2, and sae2 mutants to process the hairpins blocks recombinational repair of the DSBs and leads to generation of chromosome inverted duplications. Our results suggest an additional role for the Mre11 complex in maintaining genome stability.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1997

Hypermutability of homonucleotide runs in mismatch repair and DNA polymerase proofreading yeast mutants.

Hiep T. Tran; J D Keen; M Kricker; Michael A. Resnick; Dmitry A. Gordenin

Homonucleotide runs in coding sequences are hot spots for frameshift mutations and potential sources of genetic changes leading to cancer in humans having a mismatch repair defect. We examined frameshift mutations in homonucleotide runs of deoxyadenosines ranging from 4 to 14 bases at the same position in the LYS2 gene of the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. In the msh2 mismatch repair mutant, runs of 9 to 14 deoxyadenosines are 1,700-fold to 51,000-fold, respectively, more mutable for single-nucleotide deletions than are runs of 4 deoxyadenosines. These frameshift mutations can account for up to 99% of all forward mutations inactivating the 4-kb LYS2 gene. Based on results with single and double mutations of the POL2 and MSH2 genes, both DNA polymerase epsilon proofreading and mismatch repair are efficient for short runs while only the mismatch repair system prevents frameshift mutations in runs of > or = 8 nucleotides. Therefore, coding sequences containing long homonucleotide runs are likely to be at risk for mutational inactivation in cells lacking mismatch repair capability.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Okazaki Fragment Maturation in Yeast I. DISTRIBUTION OF FUNCTIONS BETWEEN FEN1 AND DNA2

Rao Ayyagari; Xavier V. Gomes; Dmitry A. Gordenin; Peter M. J. Burgers

In the presence of proliferating cell nuclear antigen, yeast DNA polymerase δ (Pol δ) replicated DNA at a rate of 40–60 nt/s. When downstream double-stranded DNA was encountered, Pol δ paused, but most replication complexes proceeded to carry out strand-displacement synthesis at a rate of 1.5 nt/s. In the presence of the flap endonuclease FEN1 (Rad27), the complex carried out nick translation (1.7 nt/s). The Dna2 nuclease/helicase alone did not efficiently promote nick translation, nor did it affect nick translation with FEN1. Maturation in the presence of DNA ligase was studied with various downstream primers. Downstream DNA primers, RNA primers, and small 5′-flaps were efficiently matured by Pol δ and FEN1, and Dna2 did not stimulate maturation. However, maturation of long 5′-flaps to which replication protein A can bind required both DNA2 and FEN1. The maturation kinetics were optimal with a slight molar excess over DNA of Pol δ, FEN1, and proliferating cell nuclear antigen. A large molar excess of DNA ligase substantially enhanced the rate of maturation and shortened the nick-translation patch (nucleotides excised past the RNA/DNA junction before ligation) to 4–6 nt from 8–12 nt with equimolar ligase. These results suggest that FEN1, but not DNA ligase, is a stable component of the maturation complex.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1999

The 3′→5′ Exonucleases of DNA Polymerases δ and ɛ and the 5′→3′ Exonuclease Exo1 Have Major Roles in Postreplication Mutation Avoidance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Hiep T. Tran; Dmitry A. Gordenin; Michael A. Resnick

ABSTRACT Replication fidelity is controlled by DNA polymerase proofreading and postreplication mismatch repair. We have genetically characterized the roles of the 5′→3′ Exo1 and the 3′→5′ DNA polymerase exonucleases in mismatch repair in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae by using various genetic backgrounds and highly sensitive mutation detection systems that are based on long and short homonucleotide runs. Genetic interactions were examined among DNA polymerase ɛ (pol2-4) and δ (pol3-01) mutants defective in 3′→5′ proofreading exonuclease, mutants defective in the 5′→3′ exonuclease Exo1, and mismatch repair mutants (msh2, msh3, or msh6). These three exonucleases play an important role in mutation avoidance. Surprisingly, the mutation rate in an exo1 pol3-01 mutant was comparable to that in an msh2 pol3-01 mutant, suggesting that they participate directly in postreplication mismatch repair as well as in other DNA metabolic processes.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1998

Destabilization of Yeast Micro- and Minisatellite DNA Sequences by Mutations Affecting a Nuclease Involved in Okazaki Fragment Processing (rad27) and DNA Polymerase δ (pol3-t)

Robert J. Kokoska; Lela Stefanovic; Hiep T. Tran; Michael A. Resnick; Dmitry A. Gordenin; Thomas D. Petes

ABSTRACT We examined the effects of mutations in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae RAD27 (encoding a nuclease involved in the processing of Okazaki fragments) and POL3 (encoding DNA polymerase δ) genes on the stability of a minisatellite sequence (20-bp repeats) and microsatellites (1- to 8-bp repeat units). Both therad27 and pol3-t mutations destabilized both classes of repeats, although the types of tract alterations observed in the two mutant strains were different. The tract alterations observed in rad27 strains were primarily additions, and those observed in pol3-t strains were primarily deletions. Measurements of the rates of repetitive tract alterations in strains with both rad27 and pol3-t indicated that the stimulation of microsatellite instability by rad27 was reduced by the effects of the pol3-t mutation. We also found that rad27 and pol3-01 (an allele carrying a mutation in the “proofreading” exonuclease domain of DNA polymerase δ) mutations were synthetically lethal.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2014

Hypermutation in human cancer genomes: footprints and mechanisms

Steven A. Roberts; Dmitry A. Gordenin

A role for somatic mutations in carcinogenesis is well accepted, but the degree to which mutation rates influence cancer initiation and development is under continuous debate. Recently accumulated genomic data have revealed that thousands of tumour samples are riddled by hypermutation, broadening support for the idea that many cancers acquire a mutator phenotype. This major expansion of cancer mutation data sets has provided unprecedented statistical power for the analysis of mutation spectra, which has confirmed several classical sources of mutation in cancer, highlighted new prominent mutation sources (such as apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme catalytic polypeptide-like (APOBEC) enzymes) and empowered the search for cancer drivers. The confluence of cancer mutation genomics and mechanistic insight provides great promise for understanding the basic development of cancer through mutations.

Collaboration


Dive into the Dmitry A. Gordenin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael A. Resnick

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven A. Roberts

Washington State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hiep T. Tran

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thomas A. Kunkel

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Leszek J. Klimczak

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joan F. Sterling

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter M. J. Burgers

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Piotr A. Mieczkowski

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ewa P. Malc

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge