Genes & Genetic Systems
Online ISSN : 1880-5779
Print ISSN : 1341-7568
ISSN-L : 1341-7568
Full papers
Roles of RecA protein in spontaneous mutagenesis in Escherichia coli
Satoshi KanieKatsuyoshi HoribataMitsuoki KawanoAsako IsogawaAkiko SakaiNozomi MatsuoMari NakanishiKimiko HasegawaKaoru YoshiyamaHisaji Maki
著者情報
ジャーナル フリー HTML

2007 年 82 巻 2 号 p. 99-108

詳細
抄録

To verify the extent of contribution of spontaneous DNA lesions to spontaneous mutagenesis, we have developed a new genetic system to examine simultaneously both forward mutations and recombination events occurring within about 600 base pairs of a transgenic rpsL target sequence located on Escherichia coli chromosome. In a wild-type strain, the recombination events were occurring at a frequency comparable to that of point mutations within the rpsL sequence. When the cells were UV-irradiated, the recombination events were induced much more sharply than point mutations. In a recA null mutant, no recombination event was observed. These data suggest that the blockage of DNA replication, probably caused by spontaneous DNA lesions, occurs often in normally growing E. coli cells and is mainly processed by cellular functions requiring the RecA protein. However, the recA mutant strain showed elevated frequencies of single-base frameshifts and large deletions, implying a novel mutator action of this strain. A similar mutator action of the recA mutant was also observed with a plasmid-based rpsL mutation assay. Therefore, if the recombinogenic problems in DNA replication are not properly processed by the RecA function, these would be a potential source for mutagenesis leading to single-base frameshift and large deletion in E. coli. Furthermore, the single-base frameshifts induced in the recA-deficient cells appeared to be efficiently suppressed by the mutS-dependent mismatch repair system. Thus, it seems likely that the single-base frameshifts are derived from slippage errors that are not directly caused by DNA lesions but made indirectly during some kind of error-prone DNA synthesis in the recA mutant cells.

著者関連情報
© 2007 by The Genetics Society of Japan
次の記事
feedback
Top