Literature DB >> 19892776

Lethal and mutagenic properties of MMS-generated DNA lesions in Escherichia coli cells deficient in BER and AlkB-directed DNA repair.

Anna Sikora1, Damian Mielecki, Aleksandra Chojnacka, Jadwiga Nieminuszczy, Michal Wrzesinski, Elzbieta Grzesiuk.   

Abstract

Methylmethane sulphonate (MMS), an S(N)2-type alkylating agent, generates DNA methylated bases exhibiting cytotoxic and mutagenic properties. Such damaged bases can be removed by a system of base excision repair (BER) and by oxidative DNA demethylation catalysed by AlkB protein. Here, we have shown that the lack of the BER system and functional AlkB dioxygenase results in (i) increased sensitivity to MMS, (ii) elevated level of spontaneous and MMS-induced mutations (measured by argE3 --> Arg(+) reversion) and (iii) induction of the SOS response shown by visualization of filamentous growth of bacteria. In the xth nth nfo strain additionally mutated in alkB gene, all these effects were extreme and led to 'error catastrophe', resulting from the presence of unrepaired apurinic/apyrimidinic (AP) sites and 1-methyladenine (1meA)/3-methylcytosine (3meC) lesions caused by deficiency in, respectively, BER and AlkB dioxygenase. The decreased level of MMS-induced Arg(+) revertants in the strains deficient in polymerase V (PolV) (bearing the deletion of the umuDC operon), and the increased frequency of these revertants in bacteria overproducing PolV (harbouring the pRW134 plasmid) indicate the involvement of PolV in the error-prone repair of 1meA/3meC and AP sites. Comparison of the sensitivity to MMS and the induction of Arg(+) revertants in the double nfo alkB and xth alkB, and the quadruple xth nth nfo alkB mutants showed that the more AP sites there are in DNA, the stronger the effect of the lack of AlkB protein. Since the sum of MMS-induced Arg(+) revertants in xth, nfo and nth xth nfo and alkB mutants is smaller than the frequency of these revertants in the BER(-) alkB(-) strain, we consider two possibilities: (i) the presence of AP sites in DNA results in relaxation of its structure that facilitates methylation and (ii) additional AP sites are formed in the BER(-) alkB(-) mutants.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19892776     DOI: 10.1093/mutage/gep052

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mutagenesis        ISSN: 0267-8357            Impact factor:   3.000


  10 in total

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2.  Stringent response processes suppress DNA damage sensitivity caused by deficiency in full-length translation initiation factor 2 or PriA helicase.

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4.  Rhein Inhibits AlkB Repair Enzymes and Sensitizes Cells to Methylated DNA Damage.

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6.  Cellular heterogeneity in DNA alkylation repair increases population genetic plasticity.

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7.  Cyclic di-GMP Positively Regulates DNA Repair in Vibrio cholerae.

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8.  Handling the 3-methylcytosine lesion by six human DNA polymerases members of the B-, X- and Y-families.

Authors:  Antonia Furrer; Barbara van Loon
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9.  Structural insights into DNA repair by RNase T--an exonuclease processing 3' end of structured DNA in repair pathways.

Authors:  Yu-Yuan Hsiao; Woei-Horng Fang; Chia-Chia Lee; Yi-Ping Chen; Hanna S Yuan
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2014-03-04       Impact factor: 8.029

10.  The Shu complex prevents mutagenesis and cytotoxicity of single-strand specific alkylation lesions.

Authors:  Braulio Bonilla; Alexander J Brown; Sarah R Hengel; Kyle S Rapchak; Debra Mitchell; Catherine A Pressimone; Adeola A Fagunloye; Thong T Luong; Reagan A Russell; Rudri K Vyas; Tony M Mertz; Hani S Zaher; Nima Mosammaparast; Ewa P Malc; Piotr A Mieczkowski; Steven A Roberts; Kara A Bernstein
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2021-11-01       Impact factor: 8.713

  10 in total

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