"And after all, the things that are causing those mutations are the causes of cancer."
The team analyzed the genetic codes of 7,042 cases of cancer in people from around the world, covering 30 different types of the disease, to see if they could find patterns, or signatures, of mutational processes.
They discovered that all the cancers contained two or more signatures - a finding that shows the variety of processes that work together when a cancer develops.
They also found that different cancers have different numbers of mutational processes. While two mutational processes underlie the development of ovarian cancer, there are six behind the development of liver cancer, the researchers said
And some signatures are found in multiple cancer types, while others are only found in one type. Out of the 30 cancers, 25 had signatures from mutational processes linked to ageing.
In a suggestion of what might be behind many common cancers, the team also discovered that a family of enzymes called APOBECs, known to mutate DNA, was linked to more than half of the cancer types studied.
APOBECs can be activated when the body is responding to a viral infection. The researchers said it may be that the resulting "signatures" are collateral damage on the human genome caused by the enzymes acting to protect cells from viruses.
Stratton described the results as like uncovering the "archaeological traces" of the many mutational processes that lead to most cancers.
"This compendium of mutational signatures and the consequent insights into the mutational processes underlying them has profound implications for the understanding of cancer."
(Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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