Long-term exposure to the ethanol-derived metabolite acetaldehyde elevates structural genomic alterations but not base substitutions.
Acetaldehyde is the primary metabolite of ethanol, and routes of exposure include endogenous sources, food and cigarette smoke.
APA
Lózsa R, Szikriszt B, et al. (2026). Long-term exposure to the ethanol-derived metabolite acetaldehyde elevates structural genomic alterations but not base substitutions.. Communications biology, 9(1), 243. https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-026-09521-1
MLA
Lózsa R, et al.. "Long-term exposure to the ethanol-derived metabolite acetaldehyde elevates structural genomic alterations but not base substitutions.." Communications biology, vol. 9, no. 1, 2026, pp. 243.
PMID
41545634
Abstract
Acetaldehyde is the primary metabolite of ethanol, and routes of exposure include endogenous sources, food and cigarette smoke. To explore whether the mutagenic effect of acetaldehyde is responsible for the carcinogenicity of ethanol, we use whole genome sequencing on four human cell lines subjected to long-term, physiologically relevant, analytically validated acetaldehyde treatments. Unexpectedly, the treatments do not induce increased base substitution and short insertion/deletion mutagenesis, nor the appearance of the alcohol-associated cancer mutation signature SBS16. In contrast, we observe large genomic alterations in most cell lines, which parallel the association of 32 kb to 1 Mb deletions and duplications with alcohol consumption in a Japanese gastric cancer cohort. Observations of DNA damage response and a specific requirement for the homologous recombination pathway to tolerate acetaldehyde suggest that DNA breaks are responsible for structural genomic alterations in both cell line and tumour samples, and these may contribute to the carcinogenic effect of acetaldehyde.
MeSH Terms
Acetaldehyde; Humans; Ethanol; DNA Damage; Cell Line, Tumor; Mutation; Mutagenesis