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The Somatic Mosaicism across Human Tissues Network

Authors
 Tim H H Coorens  ;  Ji Won Oh  ;  Yujin Angelina Choi  ;  Nam Seop Lim  ;  Boxun Zhao  ;  Adam Voshall  ;  Alexej Abyzov  ;  Lucinda Antonacci-Fulton  ;  Samuel Aparicio  ;  Kristin G Ardlie  ;  Thomas J Bell  ;  James T Bennett  ;  Bradley E Bernstein  ;  Thomas G Blanchard  ;  Alan P Boyle  ;  Jason D Buenrostro  ;  Kathleen H Burns  ;  Fei Chen  ;  Rui Chen  ;  Sangita Choudhury  ;  Harsha V Doddapaneni  ;  Evan E Eichler  ;  Gilad D Evrony  ;  Melissa A Faith  ;  Thomas G Fazzio  ;  Robert S Fulton  ;  Manuel Garber  ;  Nils Gehlenborg  ;  Soren Germer  ;  Gad Getz  ;  Richard A Gibbs  ;  Raquel G Hernandez  ;  Fulai Jin  ;  Jan O Korbel  ;  Dan A Landau  ;  Heather A Lawson  ;  Niall J Lennon  ;  Heng Li  ;  Yan Li  ;  Po-Ru Loh  ;  Gabor Marth  ;  Michael J McConnell  ;  Ryan E Mills  ;  Stephen B Montgomery  ;  Pradeep Natarajan  ;  Peter J Park  ;  Rahul Satija  ;  Fritz J Sedlazeck  ;  Diane D Shao  ;  Hui Shen  ;  Andrew B Stergachis  ;  Hunter R Underhill  ;  Alexander E Urban  ;  Melissa W VonDran  ;  Christopher A Walsh  ;  Ting Wang  ;  Tao P Wu  ;  Chenghang Zong  ;  Eunjung Alice Lee  ;  Flora M Vaccarino  ;  Somatic Mosaicism across Human Tissues Network 
Citation
 NATURE, Vol.643(8070) : 47-59, 2025-07 
Journal Title
NATURE
ISSN
 0028-0836 
Issue Date
2025-07
MeSH
Aging / genetics ; Clone Cells / cytology ; Clone Cells / metabolism ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Mosaicism* ; Mutation* / genetics ; Organ Specificity* / genetics ; Phenotype
Abstract
From fertilization onwards, the cells of the human body acquire variations in their DNA sequence, known as somatic mutations. These postzygotic mutations arise from intrinsic errors in DNA replication and repair, as well as from exposure to mutagens. Somatic mutations have been implicated in some diseases, but a fundamental understanding of the frequency, type and patterns of mutations across healthy human tissues has been limited. This is primarily due to the small proportion of cells harbouring specific somatic variants within an individual, making them more challenging to detect than inherited variants. Here we describe the Somatic Mosaicism across Human Tissues Network, which aims to create a reference catalogue of somatic mutations and their clonal patterns across 19 different tissue sites from 150 non-diseased donors and develop new technologies and computational tools to detect somatic mutations and assess their phenotypic consequences, including clonal expansions. This strategy enables a comprehensive examination of the mutational landscape across the human body, and provides a comparison baseline for somatic mutation in diseases. This will lead to a deep understanding of somatic mutations and clonal expansions across the lifespan, as well as their roles in health, in ageing and, by comparison, in diseases.
Full Text
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09096-7
DOI
10.1038/s41586-025-09096-7
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Anatomy (해부학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Oh, Ji Won(오지원) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5742-5120
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/209257
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