- Riva, Laura;
- Pandiri, Arun R;
- Li, Yun Rose;
- Droop, Alastair;
- Hewinson, James;
- Quail, Michael A;
- Iyer, Vivek;
- Shepherd, Rebecca;
- Herbert, Ronald A;
- Campbell, Peter J;
- Sills, Robert C;
- Alexandrov, Ludmil B;
- Balmain, Allan;
- Adams, David J
Epidemiological studies have identified many environmental agents that appear to significantly increase cancer risk in human populations. By analyzing tumor genomes from mice chronically exposed to 1 of 20 known or suspected human carcinogens, we reveal that most agents do not generate distinct mutational signatures or increase mutation burden, with most mutations, including driver mutations, resulting from tissue-specific endogenous processes. We identify signatures resulting from exposure to cobalt and vinylidene chloride and link distinct human signatures (SBS19 and SBS42) with 1,2,3-trichloropropane, a haloalkane and pollutant of drinking water, and find these and other signatures in human tumor genomes. We define the cross-species genomic landscape of tumors induced by an important compendium of agents with relevance to human health.