Literature DB >> 10394915

Analysis of yeast pms1, msh2, and mlh1 mutators points to differences in mismatch correction efficiencies between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.

Y Yang1, R Karthikeyan, S E Mack, E J Vonarx, B A Kunz.   

Abstract

Genetic stability relies in part on the efficiency with which post-replicative mismatch repair (MMR) detects and corrects DNA replication errors. In Escherichia coli, endogenous transition mispairs and insertion/deletion (ID) heterologies are corrected with similar efficiencies--but much more efficiently than transversion mispairs--as revealed by mutation rate increases in MMR mutants. To assess the relative efficiencies with which these mismatches are corrected in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we examined repair of defined mismatches on heteroduplex plasmids and compared the spectra for >1000 spontaneous SUP4-o mutations arising in isogenic wild-type or MMR-deficient (pms1, mlh1, msh2) strains. Heteroduplexes containing G/T mispairs or ID heterologies were corrected more efficiently than those containing transversion mismatches. However, the rates of single base-pair insertion/deletion were increased much more (82-fold or 34-fold, respectively) on average than the rate of base pair substitutions (4.4-fold), with the rates for total transitions and transversions increasing to similar extents. Thus, the relative efficiencies with which mismatches formed during DNA replication are repaired appear to differ in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. In addition, our results indicate that in yeast, and probably other eukaryotes, these efficiencies may not mirror those obtained from an analysis of heteroduplex correction.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10394915     DOI: 10.1007/s004380050021

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Gen Genet        ISSN: 0026-8925


  7 in total

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6.  Emergence of DNA polymerase ε antimutators that escape error-induced extinction in yeast.

Authors:  Lindsey N Williams; Alan J Herr; Bradley D Preston
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2013-01-10       Impact factor: 4.562

7.  Mutational signatures of DNA mismatch repair deficiency in C. elegans and human cancers.

Authors:  Bettina Meier; Nadezda V Volkova; Ye Hong; Pieta Schofield; Peter J Campbell; Moritz Gerstung; Anton Gartner
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2018-04-10       Impact factor: 9.043

  7 in total

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