“…These mutations have been detected with relatively higher frequency by comparison between the primary cancerous, matched para-cancerous normal, and distant normal tissues from the same patients (Brandon et al, 2006;Chatterjee et al, 2006). To date, a large number of somatic mutations have been detected among various kinds of tumor tissues, such as in breast cancer (Wang et al, 2007;Alhomidi et al, 2013), gastric cancer (Hung et al, 2010), esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (Kumimoto et al, 2004), lung cancer (Jin et al, 2007;Wang and Zhao, 2011;Fang et al, 2013;Yang Ai et al, 2013), and in aging individuals (Williams et al, 2013). Our previous study also revealed elevated somatic mutation rates through the examination of thirty entire mtDNA genomes from ten Chinese patients with lung cancer (Fang et al, 2013), as well as the poly-C repeat stretch (D310) of 79 patients (Chen et al, 2014).…”