Summary Environmental exposures play a pivotal role in carcinogenesis, yet their molecular imprints in human tissues remain incompletely understood. Here, we present an extensive catalog of mutational signatures induced by a panel of environmental carcinogens using human tissue-derived organoids coupled with high-fidelity duplex sequencing (NanoSeq). This unique combination enables direct detection of mutations without clonal expansion and reveals consistent carcinogen-specific signatures across multiple organ types (i.e., colon, stomach, liver, kidney, and pancreas). We identify mutational signatures for agents such as benzoapyrene, aflatoxin B1, aristolochic acid I, and alkylating agents, some of which show strong concordance with known tumor signatures (e.g., SBS4, SBS11, SBS22, and SBS24) and previous experimentally-derived signatures. Our findings validate organoid models as physiologically relevant platforms for chemical mutagenesis and provide a foundational resource for decoding the environmental origins of human cancer.
Kucab et al. (Mon,) studied this question.