Publication | Open Access
SOS-dependent replication past a single trans-syn T-T cyclobutane dimer gives a different mutation spectrum and increased error rate compared with replication past this lesion in uninduced cells
98
Citations
12
References
1990
Year
EngineeringBacteriophageMolecular BiologyEscherichia ColiUvra6 StrainError RateGene TransferGenome InstabilityDna ReplicationMolecular MicrobiologySos-dependent ReplicationCell BiologyDifferent Mutation SpectrumReplication EfficiencySomatic VariantGenetic EngineeringSynthetic BiologyMicrobiologyMedicineGenome EditingMutagenesis
We have transfected SOS-induced and uninduced cells of a uvrA6 strain of Escherichia coli with single-stranded M13mp7-based vectors that carried a single trans-syn T-T cyclobutane dimer at a unique site. Unlike constructs carrying the cis-syn isomer of this lesion, these vectors could be replicated with modest efficiency (14%) in the absence of SOS induction and therefore provided an opportunity to measure directly the influence of such induction on error rate and mutation spectrum. We found that translesion synthesis in the absence of SOS induction was remarkably accurate; only 4% of the replicated bacteriophage contained mutations, which were exclusively targeted single T deletions. In SOS-induced cells, error frequency increased to 11% and the resulting mutations included targeted substitutions and near-targeted single base additions, as well as the T deletions. Replication efficiency was 29% in these conditions. SOS induction therefore leads not only to an enhanced capacity to replicate damaged DNA but also to a marked change in mutation frequency and spectrum.
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