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Escherichia coli cells defective for the recN gene display constitutive elevation of mutagenesis at 3,N super(4)-ethenocytosine via an SOS-induced mechanism

The Escherichia coli UVM (odulation of mutagenesis) response is a DNA damage-inducible mutagenic pathway detected as significantly increased mutagenesis at 3,N super(4)-ethenocytosine ( epsilon C) lesions borne on transfected single-stranded M13 vector DNA. All major classes of DNA-damaging agents c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Molecular microbiology 2000-08, Vol.37 (3), p.680-686
Main Authors: Dunman, P M, Ren, L, Rahman, MS, Palejwala, V A, Murphy, H S, Volkert, M R, Humayun, M Z
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The Escherichia coli UVM (odulation of mutagenesis) response is a DNA damage-inducible mutagenic pathway detected as significantly increased mutagenesis at 3,N super(4)-ethenocytosine ( epsilon C) lesions borne on transfected single-stranded M13 vector DNA. All major classes of DNA-damaging agents can induce UVM, and the phenomenon is independent of previously characterized mutagenic responses in E. coli. To understand this phenomenon further, we set out to identify and characterize mutants in the UVM response. Screening a mutant bank of cells defective for 1-methyl-3-nitro-1-nitrosoguanidine-inducible genes revealed that defects in the recN gene cause a constitutive elevation of mutagenesis at epsilon C residues. In contrast to normal cells that show approximately 6% mutagenesis at epsilon C lesions, but approximately 60% upon UVM induction, recN-defective strains display approximately 50% mutagenesis at epsilon C lesion sites in untreated cells. However, the recN-mediated mutagenesis response was found to require the recA gene and the umuDC genes, and could be suppressed in the presence of a plasmid harbouring the SOS transcriptional repressor LexA. These results imply that recN cells are constitutively active for SOS mutagenesis functions. The observation that epsilon C mutagenesis is enhanced in recN cells confirms previous findings that mutagenesis at epsilon C can also be independently elevated by the SOS pathway.
ISSN:0950-382X
DOI:10.1046/j.1365-2958.2000.02045.x