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The in vivo mutagenic frequency and specificity of O6-methylguanine in phi X174 replicative form DNA.
76
Citations
33
References
1986
Year
GeneticsBacteriophageDna AnalysisMolecular BiologyMolecular GeneticsPhage BiologyGene TransferGenome InstabilityDna SequencingOligonucleotideDna ReplicationAmber MutationProkaryotic VirusDna DemethylationPhi XChromatinChromatin StructureNatural SciencesSynthetic BiologyVivo Mutagenic FrequencyEscherichia Coli CellsMicrobiologyMedicineGenome EditingMutagenesis
A bacteriophage phi X174-based site-specific mutagenesis system for the study of the in vivo mutagenic frequency and specificity of carcinogen-induced modification in DNA is presented. A (-)-strand primer containing O6-methylguanine in a specific site was hybridized to a single-stranded region in gene G of phi X gapped duplex DNA. The hybrid was enzymatically converted to replicative form DNA and was used to transform Escherichia coli cells. All gene G mutants generated by the modification were rescued by genetic complementation. An amber mutation in lysis gene E of the (+) strand of the replicative form DNA prevented lytic growth of wild-type phage derived from this strand. In each mutant-containing infective center produced from the transformed cells, gene G mutant phage were present in a 3:1 ratio compared to wild type. Thus, in vivo, O6-methylguanine in replicating phi X DNA has a mutagenic frequency of 75%. When repair of O6 methylguanine occurred, it was prereplicative. The mutations were due exclusively to the misincorporation of thymine.
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