Shark genes may soon take a bite out of cancer.

Great white sharks have miraculous self-repairing DNA that protects them from the deadly disease — and scientists want to use it to cure sick people, according to a new study.

In the first-ever mapping of the predators’ genes, researchers revealed superhuman “mutations” that evolved from centuries at the top of the animal kingdom, according to the study, published Monday in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Unlike unstable human genes — which are more vulnerable to cancer and other age-related illnesses — the DNA makeup of great white sharks is one and a half times bigger and much harder to destroy, according to the study, which was led by scientists at Nova Southeastern University in Florida.

“Nature has developed clever strategies to maintain the stability of genomes in these large-bodied, long-lived sharks,” the study’s co-author Mahmood Shivji said in a press release.

But scientist are still sinking their teeth into how people can benefit from copycatting the massive maneaters.

“There’s still tons to be learned from these evolutionary marvels, including information that will potentially be useful to fight cancer and age-related diseases, and improve wound-healing treatments in humans, as we uncover how these animals do it,” Shivji said.

Researchers behind the “Jaws”-dropping study also believe sharks could help with wound-healing and blood-clotting because they recover quickly from serious injuries.