Literature DB >> 28821455

RNase HII Saves rnhA Mutant Escherichia coli from R-Loop-Associated Chromosomal Fragmentation.

Elena A Kouzminova1, Farid F Kadyrov1, Andrei Kuzminov2.   

Abstract

The rnhAB mutant Escherichia coli, deficient in two RNase H enzymes that remove both R-loops and incorporated ribonucleotides (rNs) from DNA, grow slowly, suggesting accumulation of rN-containing DNA lesions (R-lesions). We report that the rnhAB mutants have reduced viability, form filaments with abnormal nucleoids, induce SOS, and fragment their chromosome, revealing replication and/or segregation stress. R-loops are known to interfere with replication forks, and sensitivity of the double rnhAB mutants to translation inhibition points to R-loops as precursors for R-lesions. However, the strict specificity of bacterial RNase HII for RNA-DNA junctions indicates that R-lesions have rNs integrated into DNA. Indeed, instead of relieving problems of rnhAB mutants, transient inhibition of replication from oriC kills them, suggesting that oriC-initiated replication removes R-loops instead of compounding them to R-lesions. Yet, replication from an R-loop-initiating plasmid origin kills the double rnhAB mutant, revealing generation of R-lesions by R-loop-primed DNA synthesis. These R-lesions could be R-tracts, contiguous runs of ≥4 RNA nucleotides within DNA strand and the only common substrate between the two bacterial RNase H enzymes. However, a plasmid relaxation test failed to detect R-tracts in DNA of the rnhAB mutants, although it readily detected R-patches (runs of 1-3 rNs). Instead, we detected R-gaps, single-strand gaps containing rNs, in the chromosomal DNA of the rnhAB mutant. Therefore, we propose that RNase H-deficient mutants convert some R-loops into R-tracts, which progress into R-gaps and then to double-strand breaks-explaining why R-tracts do not accumulate in RNase H-deficient cells, while double-strand breaks do.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  R-lesions; R-loops; SOS response; double-strand DNA breaks; stable DNA replication

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28821455      PMCID: PMC5610948          DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2017.08.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  98 in total

1.  R-loop-dependent hypernegative supercoiling in Escherichia coli topA mutants preferentially occurs at low temperatures and correlates with growth inhibition.

Authors:  E Massé; M Drolet
Journal:  J Mol Biol       Date:  1999-11-26       Impact factor: 5.469

2.  Cotranscriptionally formed DNA:RNA hybrids mediate transcription elongation impairment and transcription-associated recombination.

Authors:  Pablo Huertas; Andrés Aguilera
Journal:  Mol Cell       Date:  2003-09       Impact factor: 17.970

3.  Chromosome partitioning in Escherichia coli: novel mutants producing anucleate cells.

Authors:  S Hiraga; H Niki; T Ogura; C Ichinose; H Mori; B Ezaki; A Jaffé
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  1989-03       Impact factor: 3.490

4.  Cleavage of a DNA-RNA-DNA/DNA chimeric substrate containing a single ribonucleotide at the DNA-RNA junction with prokaryotic RNases HII.

Authors:  Mitsuru Haruki; Yasuo Tsunaka; Masaaki Morikawa; Shigenori Kanaya
Journal:  FEBS Lett       Date:  2002-11-06       Impact factor: 4.124

5.  Investigating the mechanisms of ribonucleotide excision repair in Escherichia coli.

Authors:  Alexandra Vaisman; John P McDonald; Stephan Noll; Donald Huston; Gregory Loeb; Myron F Goodman; Roger Woodgate
Journal:  Mutat Res       Date:  2014-02-01       Impact factor: 2.433

Review 6.  The precarious prokaryotic chromosome.

Authors:  Andrei Kuzminov
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2014-03-14       Impact factor: 3.490

7.  Kinetic characteristics of Escherichia coli RNase H1: cleavage of various antisense oligonucleotide-RNA duplexes.

Authors:  S T Crooke; K M Lemonidis; L Neilson; R Griffey; E A Lesnik; B P Monia
Journal:  Biochem J       Date:  1995-12-01       Impact factor: 3.857

8.  The homologous recombination machinery modulates the formation of RNA-DNA hybrids and associated chromosome instability.

Authors:  Lamia Wahba; Steven K Gore; Douglas Koshland
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2013-06-11       Impact factor: 8.140

Review 9.  Out of balance: R-loops in human disease.

Authors:  Matthias Groh; Natalia Gromak
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2014-09-18       Impact factor: 5.917

10.  The Consequences of Replicating in the Wrong Orientation: Bacterial Chromosome Duplication without an Active Replication Origin.

Authors:  Juachi U Dimude; Anna Stockum; Sarah L Midgley-Smith; Amy L Upton; Helen A Foster; Arshad Khan; Nigel J Saunders; Renata Retkute; Christian J Rudolph
Journal:  MBio       Date:  2015-11-03       Impact factor: 7.867

View more
  14 in total

1.  Thymineless Death in Escherichia coli Is Unaffected by Chromosomal Replication Complexity.

Authors:  Sharik R Khan; Andrei Kuzminov
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2019-04-09       Impact factor: 3.490

2.  RNase HIII Is Important for Okazaki Fragment Processing in Bacillus subtilis.

Authors:  Taylor M Nye; Katherine J Wozniak; Justin R Randall; Lyle A Simmons
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2019-03-13       Impact factor: 3.490

Review 3.  Guidelines for DNA recombination and repair studies: Cellular assays of DNA repair pathways.

Authors:  Hannah L Klein; Giedrė Bačinskaja; Jun Che; Anais Cheblal; Rajula Elango; Anastasiya Epshtein; Devon M Fitzgerald; Belén Gómez-González; Sharik R Khan; Sandeep Kumar; Bryan A Leland; Léa Marie; Qian Mei; Judith Miné-Hattab; Alicja Piotrowska; Erica J Polleys; Christopher D Putnam; Elina A Radchenko; Anissia Ait Saada; Cynthia J Sakofsky; Eun Yong Shim; Mathew Stracy; Jun Xia; Zhenxin Yan; Yi Yin; Andrés Aguilera; Juan Lucas Argueso; Catherine H Freudenreich; Susan M Gasser; Dmitry A Gordenin; James E Haber; Grzegorz Ira; Sue Jinks-Robertson; Megan C King; Richard D Kolodner; Andrei Kuzminov; Sarah Ae Lambert; Sang Eun Lee; Kyle M Miller; Sergei M Mirkin; Thomas D Petes; Susan M Rosenberg; Rodney Rothstein; Lorraine S Symington; Pawel Zawadzki; Nayun Kim; Michael Lisby; Anna Malkova
Journal:  Microb Cell       Date:  2019-01-07

4.  Near-continuously synthesized leading strands in Escherichia coli are broken by ribonucleotide excision.

Authors:  Glen E Cronan; Elena A Kouzminova; Andrei Kuzminov
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-01-07       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 5.  The Impact of RNA-DNA Hybrids on Genome Integrity in Bacteria.

Authors:  Emma K McLean; Taylor M Nye; Frances C Lowder; Lyle A Simmons
Journal:  Annu Rev Microbiol       Date:  2022-06-02       Impact factor: 16.232

6.  Oxidative Damage Blocks Thymineless Death and Trimethoprim Poisoning in Escherichia coli.

Authors:  T V Pritha Rao; Andrei Kuzminov
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2021-10-11       Impact factor: 3.476

7.  Sources of thymidine and analogs fueling futile damage-repair cycles and ss-gap accumulation during thymine starvation in Escherichia coli.

Authors:  T V Pritha Rao; Andrei Kuzminov
Journal:  DNA Repair (Amst)       Date:  2019-01-16

8.  RadD Contributes to R-Loop Avoidance in Sub-MIC Tobramycin.

Authors:  Veronica Negro; Evelyne Krin; Sebastian Aguilar Pierlé; Thibault Chaze; Quentin Giai Gianetto; Sean P Kennedy; Mariette Matondo; Didier Mazel; Zeynep Baharoglu
Journal:  mBio       Date:  2019-07-02       Impact factor: 7.867

9.  RnhP is a plasmid-borne RNase HI that contributes to genome maintenance in the ancestral strain Bacillus subtilis NCIB 3610.

Authors:  Taylor M Nye; Emma K McLean; Andrew M Burrage; Devon D Dennison; Daniel B Kearns; Lyle A Simmons
Journal:  Mol Microbiol       Date:  2020-09-25       Impact factor: 3.501

Review 10.  The Roles of Bacterial DNA Double-Strand Break Repair Proteins in Chromosomal DNA Replication.

Authors:  Anurag Kumar Sinha; Christophe Possoz; David R F Leach
Journal:  FEMS Microbiol Rev       Date:  2020-05-01       Impact factor: 16.408

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.