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Journal of Bacteriology, May 2003, p . 3101-3110, Vol . 185,
No . 10
Repair
System for Noncanonical Purines in Escherichia coli
Nicholas E . Burgis, Jason J . Brucker, and Richard P . Cunningham*
Department of Biological Sciences, The University at Albany, State University
of New York, Albany, New York 12222
Received 21 November 2002/ Accepted 26 February 2003
Exposure of Escherichia coli strains deficient in molybdopterin
biosynthesis (moa) to the purine base N-6-hydroxylaminopurine
(HAP) is mutagenic and toxic . We show that moa mutants exposed
to HAP also exhibit elevated mutagenesis, a hyperrecombination
phenotype, and increased SOS induction . The E . coli rdgB gene
encodes a protein homologous to a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate
pyrophosphatase from Methanococcus jannaschii that shows a preference
for purine base analogs . moa rdgB mutants are extremely sensitive
to killing by HAP and exhibit increased mutagenesis, recombination,
and SOS induction upon HAP exposure . Disruption of the endonuclease
V gene, nfi, rescues the HAP sensitivity displayed by moa
and moa rdgB mutants and reduces the level of recombination
and SOS induction, but it increases the level of mutagenesis . Our
results suggest that endonuclease V incision of DNA containing
HAP leads to increased recombination and SOS induction and even cell
death . Double-strand break repair mutants display an increase in HAP
sensitivity, which can be reversed by an nfi mutation . This
suggests that cell killing may result from an increase in
double-strand breaks generated when replication forks encounter
endonuclease V-nicked DNA . We propose a pathway for the removal of
HAP from purine pools, from deoxynucleotide triphosphate pools, and
from DNA, and we suggest a general model for excluding purine base
analogs from DNA . The system for HAP removal consists of a
molybdoenzyme, thought to detoxify HAP, a deoxyribonucleotide
triphosphate pyrophosphatase that removes noncanonical deoxyribonucleotide
triphosphates from replication precursor pools, and an endonuclease
that initiates the removal of HAP from DNA .
Extensive investigation has shown that purine base analogs can be
mutagenic to cells . 2-Aminopurine has been shown to promote base-pair
transitions in Escherichia coli and is highly mutagenic (47) .
It has been shown that the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I
inserts either deoxythymidine triphosphate or deoxycytosine
triphosphate opposite N-6-hydroxylaminopurine (HAP) in an oligonucleotide
template and that HAP induces both A:T to G:C and G:C to A:T
transition mutations in E . coli at a similar frequency (44) .
Both xanthine and hypoxanthine are readily taken up by cells
and are quickly converted to their corresponding nucleotides during
purine salvage . Furthermore, hypoxanthine, IMP, and XMP can arise
endogenously from purine interconversion and from the deamination of
canonical bases (51, 52, 62) .
Inosine residues in DNA have been shown to result in transition
mutations, and xanthosine residues in DNA are assumed to result in
transition mutations as well (22) . Therefore, it
is important for an organism to possess enzymes that protect it from
exogenous and endogenous purine base analogs .
Schaaper and colleagues have shown that E . coli strains deficient
in molybdopterin biosynthesis are hypersensitive to HAP for
both mutagenesis and toxicity (29) . They established that HAP
sensitivity is conferred by the inactivation of one of several
genes (mol genes) involved in the biosynthesis and activation
of the molybdenum cofactor, molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide (MGD) .
Two mol genes that we will discuss in this report are moa
and moeA . MGD is required for functional E . coli molybdoenzymes,
which have been shown to perform aerobic and anaerobic redox
reactions (21, 46) . Unfortunately, to date
no strain defective in one of the known molybdoenzymes has displayed
HAP sensitivity . Therefore, it has been concluded that HAP
sensitivity in E . coli mol mutants is due to the absence of an
active MGD and that an unidentified molybdoenzyme is involved in
detoxifying HAP (29) .
Our laboratory has shown that an E . coli recA200(Ts) rdgB
double mutant is inviable at the nonpermissive temperature and that
overexpression of the wild-type purA gene rescues viability
of this strain at 42°C (6, 7) . The
RecA protein plays a central role in homologous recombination and, in
conjunction with the LexA protein, induces the SOS regulon in
response to DNA damage (14, 36,
45) . The RdgB protein, along with the human and
Methanococcus jannaschii homologs, have been shown to have
deoxyribonucleoside triphosphate pyrophosphatase activity on several
purine base analog nucleotide triphosphates (4,
34) . Additionally, Clyman and Cunningham have shown that an
rdgB mutant displays a hyperrecombinogenic phenotype and shows
elevated levels of SOS expression . They suggested that in the absence
of RdgB a lesion develops in DNA that requires repair by a RecA-mediated
event (6) . The purA gene encodes adenylosuccinate
synthetase that, along with the purB gene product, catalyzes
the conversion of IMP into AMP (62) . The facts
that overexpression of purA rescues the synthetic lethal
phenotype of a recA200(Ts) rdgB double mutant and that
RdgB has activity against purine base analog nucleoside triphosphates
suggest that the lesions in recA200(Ts) rdgB strains
develop from the incorporation of purine base analogs into
polymerizing DNA .
Endonuclease V has been shown to recognize a wide variety of DNA
lesions, including mismatched base pairs and inosine and xanthosine
residues in DNA (20, 59-61) .
Endonuclease V (nfi) mutants have been shown to result in an
increase of transition mutations in the presence of nitrous acid (57) .
These results suggest that endonuclease V helps protect cells against
the mutagenic effects of nitrosative deamination, which produces
xanthine and inosine residues in DNA . Because of these results,
we chose to investigate the protective role of endonuclease V in
preventing stable HAP incorporation into DNA . It has been shown that
the exonucleolytic proofreading (dnaQ) or the postreplicative
mismatch repair system (mutHLS gene products) provide little
or no protection against stable incorporation of HAP residues in DNA
(50) . Here we present data suggesting that endonuclease
V initiates repair events at HAP residues in DNA and show that
moa nfi double mutants exhibit elevated levels of transition
mutations and increased cell survival compared to moa mutants .
Several studies have suggested that potentially lethal double-strand
breaks (DSBs) can arise when replication forks traverse nicked
DNA (19, 32, 39,
53) . Therefore, the initiation of DNA repair by
incision of damaged DNA can lead to cell death . E . coli possesses
several well-studied enzymes for the repair of DSBs and restart
of collapsed replication forks (for reviews, see references
9, 36, and 49) . The data
we present support the hypothesis that a molybdoenzyme converts HAP
into a less toxic compound, that RdgB excludes 2'-deoxy-HAP
triphosphate (dHAPTP) from replication precursor pools, that
endonuclease V is the major endonuclease that recognizes HAP in DNA,
and that nicking by endonuclease V at HAP residues leads to DSBs that
require replication fork reactivation for continued DNA synthesis .
Strains and growth conditions. The bacterial strains, plasmids,
and phage used in this study are listed in Table 1 .
The medium used for growth was TY (10 g of tryptone, 5 g of yeast
extract, and 10 g of NaCl per liter) and M9 minimal medium (40) .
M9 medium was sometimes supplemented with arginine (100 µg/ml),
histidine-HCl (100 µg/ml), and thiamine-HCl (1 µg/ml) . For cell
dilutions and washings, phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) was used (48) .
Antibiotics were used at the following concentrations: tetracycline
hydrochloride, 20 µg/ml; kanamycin sulfate, 34 µg/ml;
chloramphenicol, 20 µg/ml . HAP was purchased from U.S . Biochemical
Corp . Cell growth was routinely monitored in a Klett-Summerson
photocolorimeter with a green 54 filter; 30 Klett units were
equivalent to 108 cells/ml .
| TABLE 1 . E . coli strains used
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Strain construction. Selection for tetracycline-sensitive
clones was performed as described previously (3).
recA
and
nfi
strains were constructed by the method of Link et al . (35) .
P1-mediated transductions were performed as described previously (56).
recA alleles were introduced into appropriate recipients by
cotransduction with the linked slrD300::Tn10 allele (11).
nfi
alleles were introduced into appropriate recipients by cotransduction
with the linked thiC39::Tn10 allele (41) .
All strains containing these deletions were verified by PCR analysis
(35) . The moeA::Kan strain was constructed
by mutagenesis with an EZ::TN transposon (Epicentre, Madison, Wis.)
according to the manufacturer's protocol . Briefly, an EZ::TN library
was constructed in CSH106, and HAP-dependent mutators were selected
on lactose minimal medium plates after exposure to HAP .
Identification of the genes inactivated by transposition was
performed by DNA sequence analysis .
Measurement of HAP cytotoxicity. Fresh overnight cultures of
strains to be tested (0.35 ml) were diluted into 35 ml of fresh TY
medium and grown with aeration at 37°C . When the cultures reached a
cell density of 2 x 108/ml,
5-ml aliquots were transferred to separate flasks and incubated in
the presence or absence of HAP for 1 h . One-milliliter aliquots were
removed, and cells were washed twice with PBS, resuspended in 1 ml of
PBS, and immediately placed on ice . Cells were diluted to appropriate
cell densities with PBS, plated on TY plates, and incubated at 37°C .
Surviving colonies were scored the next day . For this assay the
wild-type strain was CSH106, and all strains tested were derivatives
of CSH106 . Bacterial strains were also assayed for HAP sensitivity by
the gradient plate method . For the gradient plate assay, the
wild-type strain was AB1157 and all strains tested were derivatives
of AB1157 . Agar media containing linear concentration gradients
of HAP were prepared by the method of Cunningham et al . (12) .
Plates were stained with acridine orange solution (0.2 mg/ml in
ethanol) and photographed with UV exposure using a 590-nm optical
filter (Kodak, Rochester, N.Y.) .
Measurement of mutant frequencies. Mutant frequencies were
measured by a modification of the procedure of Cupples and Miller (13) .
Fresh overnight cultures of derivatives of CSH106 (0.35 ml) were
diluted into 35 ml of fresh TY medium and grown with aeration at
37°C . When the cultures reached a cell density of 2
x 108/ml, 5-ml aliquots were
transferred to separate flasks and incubated in the presence or
absence of HAP for 1 h . One-milliliter aliquots were removed, and
cells were washed twice with PBS, resuspended in 1 ml of PBS, and
immediately placed on ice . Cells were diluted to appropriate
cell densities with PBS and plated on minimal medium plates
containing 0.4% lactose and on TY plates . TY and lactose minimal
medium plates were incubated at 37°C for 18 and 42 h, respectively,
to measure viable cells and Lac+ revertants .
Measurement of recombination proficiency. Intrachromosomal
recombination was measured by a modification of the procedure of Zieg
et al . (63) in derivatives of BW9113 . A 35-ml
volume of fresh TY medium was inoculated with a single colony of the
strain to be tested and grown with aeration at 37°C . When the
cultures reached a cell density of 108/ml, 5-ml aliquots
were transferred to separate flasks and incubated in the presence or
absence of HAP for 1 h . One-milliliter aliquots were removed, and
cells were washed twice with PBS, resuspended in 1 ml of PBS, and
immediately placed on ice . Cells were diluted to appropriate cell
densities with PBS, plated on minimal medium plates containing 0.4%
lactose, and incubated at 37°C for 42 h . Lac+ recombinants
were scored .
Measurement of SOS induction. Fresh overnight cultures of
derivatives of NO120 (0.35 ml) were diluted into 35 ml of fresh TY
medium and grown with aeration at 37°C . When the cultures reached a
cell density of 2 x 108/ml,
5-ml aliquots were transferred to separate flasks and incubated in
the presence or absence of HAP for 1 h . Aliquots were removed, and
ß-galactosidase levels were determined by the method of Miller (40) .
HAP cytotoxicity. To assess the role of gene products we
suspected to be required for the exclusion of purine base analogs
from DNA, we determined whether strains lacking functional gene
products displayed a significant change in HAP sensitivity . For the
cytotoxicity assay, we exposed exponentially growing moa
(MGD-deficient) cells to various concentrations of HAP for 1 h .
Cytotoxicity tests showed that wild-type cells were not sensitive to
HAP at any concentration tested up to 1 µg/ml, while moa
mutants were sensitive to HAP and displayed about 20% survival after
exposure to 1 µg of HAP/ml (Fig . 1) . moa rdgB
mutants were significantly more sensitive to HAP than the single
moa mutant and displayed approximately 20% survival after
exposure to 0.1 µg of HAP/ml . This result suggests a synergy between
a HAP-detoxifying molybdoenzyme and RdgB in HAP detoxification .
Figure 1 shows that endonuclease V deficiency dramatically
reversed the HAP-sensitive phenotype of moa and moa rdgB
mutants at all concentrations tested (greater than 70% survival after
exposure to 1 µg of HAP/ml) . Finally, we demonstrated that an rdgB
mutant is HAP resistant, showing that the moa mutation is required
for HAP sensitivity . Our results suggest that an MGD-dependent
enzyme is the major determinant of HAP resistance and that the RdgB
protein plays a role in excluding HAP from DNA, while endonuclease V
plays a role in removing HAP residues from DNA .
|
FIG . 1 . Relative HAP sensitivity of E . coli strains mutant for
suspected purine base analog-metabolizing enzymes . Mid-log-phase cells
were exposed to various concentrations of HAP for 1 h at 37°C . Data were
recorded as percent survival at the various HAP concentrations . Each
data point represents one bacterial culture . Symbols:
,
CSH106 (wild type); •, NEB9 (moa);
,
NEB10 (moa rdgB);
,
NEB19 (moa nfi);
,
NEB41 (moa rdgB nfi);
,
NEB1 (rdgB).
|
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Mutagenesis assays. Mutagenesis assays demonstrated that
mutants deficient in MGD biosynthesis, RdgB protein, and endonuclease
V exhibit increased mutation frequencies . This assay employed an
E . coli strain that had been engineered to detect an A:T to G:C
transition mutation at one specific nucleotide position in the
lacZ gene . This specific mutation event results in a reversion to
the Lac+ phenotype, allowing measurement of the frequency of A:T to
G:C transition mutations by plating on minimal lactose plates for
mutants and TY plates for viable counts (13) . For this
assay, the wild-type mutation frequencies with or without HAP were
extremely low, and the baseline value for the wild type was 1
revertant/108 CFU . Hence, moa mutants showed a 1,000-fold
increase in the frequency of A:T to G:C transition mutations
compared to the wild type at the highest HAP concentration tested (1
µg/ml), while moa nfi mutants showed a 5,500-fold increase in
mutation frequency over wild type (Fig . 2A) . moa rdgB
mutants are extremely sensitive to HAP and were assayed at much lower
concentrations of HAP to prevent excessive killing (Fig . 2B) .
At 0.1 µg of HAP/ml, moa rdgB mutants exhibited a 1,500-fold
increase in mutation frequency over wild type, whereas moa mutants
showed a 100-fold increase over wild type at this concentration .
moa rdgB nfi mutants are "supermutators" with respect to HAP,
and mutation frequencies for this strain departed from linearity
at concentrations greater than 0.4 µg/ml . Nonetheless, at this
concentration moa rdgB nfi mutants showed an increase in
mutation frequency of over 8,000-fold compared to wild type (Fig.
2A) . When the moa, rdgB, and nfi gene
products are deficient, the cell is unable to prevent HAP
incorporation into DNA or to initiate subsequent repair . Therefore,
this strain's DNA might be expected to be highly substituted with
HAP, as suggested by the supermutator phenotype upon HAP exposure . By
comparison, an rdgB nfi strain showed no HAP-dependent
mutagenesis, again demonstrating that a moa mutation causes
the most significant sensitivity to HAP .
|
FIG . 2 . (A) HAP-induced mutagenesis frequencies of E . coli
strains mutant for suspected purine base analog-metabolizing enzymes .
Mid-log-phase cells were exposed to various concentrations of HAP for 1
h at 37°C . Results for wild type and rdgB nfi were
indistinguishable . (B) HAP-induced mutagenesis frequencies of NEB10 (moa
rdgB) at very low HAP concentrations . Each data point represents one
bacterial culture . Symbols:
,
CSH106 (wild type); •, NEB9 (moa);
,
NEB10 (moa rdgB);
,
NEB19 (moa nfi);
,
NEB41 (moa rdgB nfi);
,
NEB32 (rdgB nfi).
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Recombination assays. Clyman and Cunningham reported that an
rdgB mutant showed enhanced intrachromosomal recombination (6) .
The synthetic lethality of recA rdgB double mutants suggests
that in the absence of RdgB a lesion develops in DNA that must be
repaired by a RecA-dependent recombinational event (6) .
Therefore, we reasoned that if RdgB has activity against dHAPTP,
recombination frequencies should increase in a moa rdgB mutant
exposed to HAP compared to a moa mutant . Furthermore, if
endonuclease V has activity against HAP-containing DNA, as the
cytotoxicity and mutagenesis assays indicate, then recombination
frequencies in nfi mutants exposed to HAP should be decreased,
due to lack of endonuclease V-catalyzed nicking at HAP residues in
DNA .
The recombination assay we used measures the frequency at which
two nontandem partially deleted lac operons recombine to produce
Lac+ progeny (27, 63) .
For this assay, early-log-phase cells were exposed to HAP for 1 h at
concentrations that yielded a linear dose response . Figure
3 shows that the recombination frequency of a
moa mutant increased from less than 100 Lac+ colonies per plate
without HAP to over 450 Lac+ colonies with exposure to 1
µg of HAP/ml . Conversely, the wild-type tester strain showed no
increase in recombination frequency and produced about 100 Lac+
colonies per plate for all HAP concentrations tested . This result
suggests that the incorporation of HAP residues into polymerizing DNA
results in an increased frequency of homologous recombination .
Transducing a moa strain to rdgB results in a
synergistic effect on intrachromosomal recombination with increasing
HAP, and this strain produced over 450 Lac+ colonies per plate
at 0.15 µg of HAP/ml . An rdgB strain showed a twofold
increase in recombination frequency over wild type in the absence of
HAP, as previously reported (6), but the recombination
frequency was not elevated in the presence of HAP . When any of these
strains were transduced to nfi, the recombination frequency
decreased to wild-type levels (about 100 Lac+ colonies per
plate) under all conditions tested (Fig . 3) . These
data support the notion that the incorporation of HAP into DNA
generates lesions that stimulate recombination and that these lesions
appear to arise from the initiation of DNA repair events, because
recombination frequencies are dramatically reduced when endonuclease
V is absent . Furthermore, the rdgB data in Fig .
3 suggest that some endogenous noncanonical purine is
incorporated into DNA in the absence of the RdgB protein and that
this purine is recognized by endonuclease V .
|
FIG . 3 . Recombination frequencies of E . coli strains mutant for
suspected purine base analog-metabolizing enzymes upon HAP exposure .
Early-log-phase cells were exposed to various concentrations of HAP for
1 h at 37°C . Each data point represents one bacterial culture . Symbols:
,
NEB123 (wild type); •, NEB124 (moa);
,
NEB126 (moa rdgB);
,
NEB127 (moa nfi);
,
NEB128 (moa rdgB nfi);
,
NEB125 (rdgB);
,
NEB129 (rdgB nfi).
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SOS induction assays. The SOS assay employs a ß-galactosidase
reporter gene fused to the promoter of the sulA gene, an
SOS-inducible gene (25) . Clyman and Cunningham
reported that rdgB mutants were induced for the SOS response (6) .
We have examined the ability of HAP to induce the SOS response in
various mutants deficient in HAP detoxification or repair . For this
assay, cells were grown to mid-log phase and incubated with HAP for 1
h at HAP concentrations that prevent excessive killing . Figure
4A shows that wild-type cells showed no increase in
SOS induction in the presence of HAP, yielding a baseline value of
about 150 Miller units . Conversely, transducing the tester strain to
moa resulted in an increase in SOS induction of greater than
threefold (540 Miller units) at 1 µg of HAP/ml . Transducing a moa
strain to rdgB resulted in a synergistic effect on SOS induction
with increasing HAP, and the moa rdgB double mutant displayed
a fourfold increase in SOS induction compared to the wild-type
tester strain at only 0.4 µg of HAP/ml . An rdgB strain showed
a twofold increase in SOS induction in the absence of HAP, as
previously reported (6), but the level of SOS expression
was not increased in the presence of HAP . Transduction of these
strains to nfi resulted in reduced SOS induction for all strains
and conditions tested (Fig . 4A) . This result suggests
that the inability of nfi mutants to incise HAP-containing DNA
prevents the formation of a DNA structure that signals SOS induction .
In this assay, we noted that the introduction of an nfi mutation
did not completely restore SOS induction levels of moa mutants
to wild-type levels (Fig . 4B) . In fact, there appeared
to be a small induction of the SOS response caused by HAP in nfi
mutants . This induction occurred at lower HAP concentrations in an
rdgB strain, as expected . This result suggests that there is some
other enzyme in E . coli that has the ability to incise
HAP-containing DNA, but it is either very inefficient or present at
very low levels .
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FIG . 4 . (A) SOS induction of E . coli strains mutant for suspected
purine base analog-metabolizing enzymes upon HAP exposure . Mid-log-phase
cells were exposed to various concentrations of HAP for 1 h at 37°C . (B)
Expanded view of induction in three strains . Each data point represents
one bacterial culture . Symbols:
,
NO120 (wild type); •, NEB137 (moa);
,
NEB139 (moa rdgB);
,
NEB138 (moa nfi);
,
NEB140 (moa rdgB nfi);
,
NEB134 (rdgB);
,
NEB135 (rdgB nfi).
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HAP cytotoxicity of lexA3 mutants. RecA-activated
self-cleavage of the LexA repressor initiates the SOS response (14) .
Subsequently, induction of the SOS response results in the
upregulation of dozens of DNA repair and damage tolerance genes . A
lexA3 mutant is incapable of self-cleavage, and lexA3
strains do not initiate the SOS response (14) . Figures
5A and B show that moa lexA3 mutants plated on a
linear gradient of HAP showed increased HAP sensitivity compared to
moa mutants . This suggests that induction of the SOS response
is essential for repair of HAP lesions . Furthermore, HAP gradient
plates showed that inactivation of the endonuclease V gene can
dramatically reverse the extreme HAP-sensitive phenotype of a moa
lexA double mutant (Fig . 5C) . Therefore, it
appears that in the absence of endonuclease V the need for an induced
SOS state is relieved for MGD-deficient strains in the presence of
HAP .
|
FIG . 5 . Gradient plate test for HAP sensitivity . The length of a line of
cell growth is a measure of the strain's resistance to HAP (MIC) . (A)
The agar (50 ml) contained a total of 50 µl of a 5-mg/ml HAP solution
distributed in a linear gradient increasing from left to right . The
strains used (top to bottom) were NEB21, NEB122, NEB152, NEB117, NEB118,
NEB55, NEB119, and NEB120 . (B) Same experiments as shown in panel A,
except that 100 µl of a 5-mg/ml HAP solution was used . (C) The agar (50
ml) contained a total of 250 µl of a 5-mg/ml HAP solution distributed in
a linear gradient increasing from left to right . The strains used (top
to bottom) were NEB21, NEB117, JB43, NEB118, JB48, NEB55, JB42, NEB119,
and JB44 . (D) The agar (50 ml) contained a total of 250 µl of a 5-mg/ml
HAP solution distributed in a linear gradient increasing from left to
right . The strains used (top to bottom) were NEB122, NEB152, JB46,
NEB120, JB47, and AB1157.
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DSBR and replication fork reactivation. Processes of homologous
recombination are known to protect cells against DNA lesions (such as
nicks in DNA) that can collapse replication forks (15,
18, 39) . Homologous recombination
processes in E . coli are thought to be initiated by either
single-stranded gaps in DNA or by double-stranded ends . DSB repair
(DSBR) is known to utilize the RecBCD repair pathway, while the
recFOR gene products have been shown to initiate repair of
single-stranded gaps (1, 9,
24, 37, 55) . Because we
saw an increase in recombination frequencies in moa mutants
exposed to HAP, we wished to determine if single-stranded gaps or
DSBs initiated recombinational processes . Therefore, we compared the
relative sensitivities of recBCD and recF mutant cells
plated on a linear gradient of HAP . HAP gradient plates showed that
moa recBCD mutants are extremely sensitive to HAP and display
a MIC of about 2 µg of HAP/ml, while moa recF mutants are only
slightly more sensitive to HAP than moa mutants and these
strains display MICs of about 10 and 15 µg/ml, respectively (Fig.
5A, B, and C) . These results suggest that exposure
of moa strains to HAP results in DSBs, which must be repaired
by the RecBCD repair pathway .
Processing of double-strand ends by the recBCD gene products
results in single-stranded 3'-terminated DNA that, when bound
by RecA, becomes a substrate for strand invasion of sister duplex DNA
(8) . Strand invasion can result in a Holliday junction,
allowing DNA polymerases to traverse the region of the DSB .
Resolution of the Holliday junction can be achieved by the RuvABC
resolvase . Subsequently, loading of the replication restart primosome
can restart replication (8) . Because of the intimate
involvement of RecA and the RuvABC resolvase in DSBR, we investigated
the relative HAP sensitivities of moeA recA and moeA ruvC
double mutants with that of a single moeA mutant to further
determine the importance of DSBR for cell survival . The HAP gradient
plates in Fig . 5A and B show that both RecA and
RuvC confer protection against HAP killing, because moeA recA
and moeA ruvC double mutants displayed MICs of less than 2
µg/ml and roughly 4 µg/ml, respectively, compared to a MIC of 15
µg/ml for a moeA strain . The more modest increase in HAP
sensitivity for moeA ruvC double mutants compared to that in
the other DSBR mutants can best be explained by the redundancy the
RuvABC resolvase and RecG DNA helicases, which can both resolve
Holliday junctions . The extreme sensitivity of the moeA recA
mutant underscores the dependence of homologous recombination and
induction of the SOS response for survival of MGD-deficient strains
exposed to HAP . Due to incompatibility of available antibiotic
resistance markers, we present AB1157 derivatives carrying either a
moa or a moeA mutation . As we have shown in Fig.
5B and as reported by Schaaper and colleagues,
these strains show similar sensitivities to HAP (29) .
Replication fork reactivation is another process involving homologous
recombination that can restart collapsed replication forks (10,
38, 49) . Replication fork
reactivation is directed by the priA gene product, a
DNA-binding protein and 3' 5'
DNA helicase (38) . PriA recognizes D-loops, the
initial structure created by RecA- and RecBCD-mediated strand
invasion of sister duplex DNA . Binding of PriA to the D-loop leads to
the formation of a PriA-PriB-DnaT-D-loop complex that facilitates
assembly of the primosome and subsequent replication fork
reactivation (38) . Because we suspected the
accumulation of DSBs resulting from replication forks traversing
endonuclease V-nicked HAP-containing DNA to be the lethal event in
HAP toxicity, we suspected replication restart mutants to be
extremely HAP sensitive . PriA is essential for replication fork
reactivation (10) . Therefore, we investigated the relative
HAP sensitivity of a moa priA double mutant compared to that
of a single moa mutant . We found that moa priA double
mutants were extremely HAP sensitive and displayed a MIC of less than
2 µg/ml compared to a MIC of 15 µg/ml for moa mutants
(Fig . 5A) . These data suggest that replication restart plays
an important role in cell survival upon HAP exposure and that
replication forks encounter an increased number of lesions that lead
to replication fork collapse when HAP is not detoxified in vivo .
Inactivation of the endonuclease V gene rescues the extreme
HAP-sensitive phenotype of DSBR and replication fork reactivation
mutants . Transduction of recBCD, recA, ruvC, and priA
mutants in an MGD-deficient background to nfi resulted in a
significant reversal of the HAP-sensitive phenotype for all strains
tested (Fig . 5C and D) . Transducing moa recBCD
to nfi resulted in a rescue of HAP sensitivity, and this
strain displayed a MIC of about 40 µg/ml, which is about a 20-fold
rescue in HAP sensitivity compared to a MIC of about 2 µg of HAP/ml
for moa recBCD cells . Transducing moa priA double mutants to
nfi resulted in a rescue of HAP sensitivity, and this strain
displayed a MIC of about 30 µg/ml . Compared to the MIC of less
than 2 µg/ml displayed by a moa priA strain, the triple mutant
showed at least a 15-fold rescue in HAP sensitivity . Plating moeA
recA nfi triple mutants on a 50-µg/ml HAP gradient plate resulted
in a MIC of about 25 µg/ml . This is at least a 10-fold decrease in
sensitivity compared to a moeA recA strain, which shows a MIC
of less than 2 µg/ml . Therefore, the moeA recA mutant showed a
slightly more modest rescue of HAP sensitivity . This can probably
best be explained by the ubiquitous role of RecA in all homologous
recombinational processes and its role in induction of the SOS
response . Transducing a moeA ruvC strain to nfi
resulted in a MIC about 40 µg/ml . Comparing this triple mutant to a
moeA ruvC double mutant, which displayed a MIC of 4 µg/ml, we
observed a 10-fold rescue of HAP sensitivity . Finally, a moa recF
nfi triple mutant showed no HAP sensitivity under the conditions
tested, as expected if RecF is not required for HAP-induced
recombination . These results support the idea that the initiation of
repair of HAP lesions by endonuclease V can lead to cell death by the
accumulation of DSBs in DNA that could occur when replicative
polymerases traverse endonuclease V-nicked DNA .
The experiments presented in this paper lead us to propose a model
for a system that prevents incorporation of HAP into DNA at three
different points in nucleic acid metabolism (Fig . 6) .
At the level of free base, a yet-unidentified molybdoenzyme(s)
is responsible for converting HAP into a nontoxic substance via an
unknown detoxifying reaction, as shown by Kozmin et al . (29)
and the results presented in this paper . To date, nine E . coli
molybdoenzymes have been described, many of which display activity
only under anaerobic conditions and therefore are unlikely to possess
the HAP-detoxifying activity we saw under our aerobic experimental
conditions . Several strains bearing mutations in genes for putative
HAP-detoxifying molybdoenzymes have been tested by our laboratory and
the Schaaper laboratory (29), and they show no
increase in HAP sensitivity compared to their isogenic wild-type
parental strains . These include strains bearing mutations in genes
that encode the dimethyl sulfoxide reductase, trimethylamine-N-oxide
reductase, and biotin sulfoxide reductase (29) . Clement
and Kunze have shown that mammalian xanthine oxidase is capable
of converting HAP to adenine (5) . Homology searches of
the E . coli genome for xanthine oxidase reveal three open
reading frames with sequence similarity to mammalian xanthine
oxidases (33) . These data suggest that one or more
of the three potential xanthine oxidases could be candidates for the
HAP detoxification activity . Our lab has constructed an E . coli
strain in which all three putative xanthine oxidase genes have been
inactivated, and this strain shows no HAP sensitivity (data not
shown) . Although all the known E . coli molybdoenzymes have not
been tested, the best candidates have been tested, and the identity
of the HAP-detoxifying molybdoenzyme(s) still remains unknown .
|
FIG . 6 . Model for excluding HAP and endogenous purine base analogs from
DNA . Symbols: H = HAP, N = any base.
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In the absence of the detoxifying molybdoenzyme(s), HAP apparently
can enter the nucleotide pools by conversion to HAP-monophosphate
(HAPMP) by at least one of the purine phosphoribosyltransferases .
Subsequently, it appears that HAPMP can be a substrate for AMP
kinase . HAP-diphosphate would then follow the general pathway of
2'-OH reduction by ribonucleotide diphosphate reductase and
phosphorylation by nucleoside diphosphokinase, resulting in dHAPTP (62) .
Structure-based identification of the RdgB homolog in M .
jannaschii, Mj0226, and biochemical studies of the protein have
shown Mj0226 to be a deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate pyrophosphatase
having substrate specificity for noncanonical purine nucleoside
triphosphates (26) . Our data suggest that RdgB is capable of
efficiently hydrolyzing dHAPTP . Surprisingly, Chung et al . have
reported that Mj0226 displays a substrate specificity for dHAPTP
that is at least 1,500-fold less than that for xanthine triphosphate
(XTP), at least 1,000-fold less than that for dITP, and actually
lower than that for dGTP (4) . However, in our hands, the
pyrophosphatase activity of RdgB against GTP can be significantly
inhibited by addition of HAP to the reaction (unpublished results) .
Our inhibition results suggest that dHAPTP may be a good substrate
for the RdgB protein . Furthermore, mutants of the Saccharomyces
cerevisiae homolog, HAM1, show hypersensitivity to HAP and HAP
hypermutability, again suggesting that dHAPTP is a substrate
for RdgB and its homologs (42, 43) . The
discrepancy between our results and those of Chung et al . suggests
that the substrate specificity of RdgB and its homologs needs to be
reinvestigated .
Should HAP be incorporated into replicating DNA, it would become a
substrate for endonuclease V . Inactivation of the endonuclease V gene
shows an almost complete reversal of the sensitivity,
hyperrecombinogenic, and SOS-induced phenotypes of moa and moa
rdgB mutants exposed to HAP, but it results in a dramatic increase
in mutational frequencies upon HAP exposure . These results indicate
that endonuclease V is the major enzyme that recognizes HAP in
DNA and initiates repair of these lesions . Endonuclease V-initiated
repair may be a slow process, resulting in long-lived repair
intermediates that would be capable of both providing substrates for
recombinational repair and inducing the SOS response . It is
interesting that the repair intermediates generated by endonuclease V
nicking at HAP lesions are the direct cause of the HAP-sensitive,
hyperrecombinogenic, and SOS-induced phenotypes of moa and moa
rdgB strains . Therefore, endonuclease V nicking of HAP, which
is nontoxic, results in a potentially toxic lesion .
There are two interesting distinctions between E . coli and S .
cerevisiae that should be noted here . First, S . cerevisiae HAM1
mutants show hypersensitivity to HAP, whereas E . coli rdgB mutants
show no HAP sensitivity (42) . This may suggest that in
E . coli the detoxifying activity of RdgB is backup to the
molybdoenzyme detoxifying activity with respect to HAP, in contrast
to yeast where the HAM1 protein is the major HAP detoxifying enzyme .
Secondly, S . cerevisiae, which does not possess an endonuclease
V homolog, shows no increase in recombination when exposed to
HAP (43) . This result further supports that endonuclease V in
E . coli recognizes HAP residues in DNA and that the initiation
of repair by endonuclease V promotes recombination .
Endonuclease V nicks the lesion-containing DNA strand at the
second phosphodiester bond 3' to the lesion (58) . An
endonuclease V-initiated repair event has the potential to result in
a DSB if a replication fork traverses an endonuclease V-nicked
lesion . Results presented here demonstrate that exposure of
MGD-deficient strains to HAP results in an increase of endonuclease
V-sensitive sites in DNA, which can lead to DSBs that must be
repaired by the RecBCD repair pathway . Recombinational repair
intermediates processed by the RecBCD complex can resume DNA
replication via DSBR and replication fork reactivation (8,
10, 38, 49) .
The results presented here are very similar to the results reported
by Guo and Weiss (17) . They showed that an nfi
mutant was more resistant to nitrous acid than wild type and
suggested that endonuclease V could create DSBs by acting on
deaminated bases . Our results are also similar to those of Spek et
al . (53, 54) . They presented
data showing that AP endonuclease-deficient cells can be protected
from NO· toxicity by inactivation of uracil (Ung) or
formamidopyrimidine (Fpg) DNA glycosylases . Their data showed that
the activity of these DNA glycosylases on NO·-induced base
damage resulted in the accumulation of base excision repair
intermediates that are capable of causing DSBs and subsequently
require the action of RecBCD for DSBR (53,
54) . Taken together, these studies show that processes
that repair and prevent lesions in DNA require a coordinated
repair scheme, and deficiencies in the processes that maintain
genomic integrity can result in cell death .
It is currently unknown what cellular components are involved in
processing repair intermediates resulting from endonuclease V nicking
of DNA . Endonuclease V activity at HAP residues would merely nick the
lesion-containing DNA strand one base 3' of the HAP residue .
Therefore, it seems reasonable that a 3' 5'
exonuclease would be needed to remove the lesion from DNA (20) .
Alternatively, endonuclease V could recruit another endonuclease
to cleave the lesion-containing strand 5' of the lesion . Either
scenario would additionally require DNA polymerase I and DNA ligase (20) .
Our results beg the question, what is the biological significance
of this pathway? E . coli in its natural environment would not
be expected to encounter very much HAP, if any at all . Indeed, it
seems unreasonable that the need to sanitize purine pools of HAP or
dHAPTP is so great that a system would evolve simply for that
purpose . Furthermore, homology searches with the RdgB and
endonuclease V amino acid sequences reveal that this system is
evolutionarily conserved throughout phylogeny, from bacteria to
humans (26, 28, 30,
34) . Therefore, we propose that this system has
evolved to exclude endogenous purine base analogs, such as dITP and
dXTP, from replication precursor pools and DNA . IMP and XMP are both
intermediates in the biosynthesis of dATP and dGTP and therefore may
be present in cells in appreciable quantities (62) .
Spontaneous deamination of adenine and guanine bases, nucleosides,
and nucleotides also can lead to the production of hypoxanthine and
xanthine bases, nucleosides, and nucleotides, respectively, in vivo (51,
52) . Several lines of evidence support our model .
Chung et al . have shown that the best substrates for Mj0226
are XTP and dITP and that these substrates, respectively, display
substrate specificities that are at least 150- and 100-fold greater
than the best canonical purine nucleotide, GTP (4) .
They also report that RdgB (Ec197) shows a 65-fold-greater activity
against dITP than dGTP (4) . Similarly, the human
homolog, human ITP pyrophosphatase, shows pyrophosphatase activity
against dITP and XTP that is about 10-fold better than the activity
against dGTP (34) . These results suggest that RdgB and
its homologs are responsible for removing these endogenous purine
nucleotide triphosphates from purine pools . The Kow laboratory has
shown that endonuclease V is active against deoxyinosine and
deoxyxanthosine residues in double-stranded DNA (20,
60) . Clyman and Cunningham reported that an
rdgB strain shows elevated levels of recombination and is
partially induced for the SOS response (6) . In this paper
we have shown that transducing an rdgB strain to nfi results
in a decrease in the SOS-induced and hyperrecombinogenic phenotypes
to near wild-type levels in the absence of HAP (Fig . 3
and 4A) . Taken together, these results strongly
suggest that endogenous noncanonical deoxynucleotide triphosphates
persist in the cell when RdgB is absent, that these deoxynucleotide
triphosphates are incorporated into DNA, and that they are substrates
for endonuclease V . Subsequently, endonuclease V nicking at these
residues leads to the observed phenotypes in the absence of
HAP . Figure 6 shows that our model for the detoxification of
endogenous purine base analogs is similar to the model for HAP
detoxification . This model is an extension of the models proposed by
Noskov et al . (42) and Kow (28) .
This study has shown that a system exists in E . coli to help
cells cope with the exogenous purine base analog HAP and suggests
that the system has been conserved throughout phylogeny to remove
endogenous purine base analogs from purine nucleotide pools and
to excise endogenous purine base analogs that have been incorporated
into DNA by replicative polymerases .
The system we have described is similar to two other systems that
prevent the incorporation of uracil and 8-oxoguanine into DNA . In
these systems, the deoxyribonucleotide triphosphate pool is sanitized
through the action of dUTPase (23) and the MutT
protein (2), respectively . If uracil or 8-oxoguanine is
incorporated into DNA, it is removed by the repair enzymes uracil-DNA
glycosylase (31) and the MutM protein (fapy-DNA
glycosylase) (16), respectively . In both cases it
appears that the presence of dUTP and 8-oxoguanine triphosphate is
significant in the cell, and it is known that the incorporation of
these nucleotides into DNA by polymerases occurs readily (16,
31) . The fact that cells have a similar system for
purine base analogs suggests that the occurrence of base analog
nucleotides is widespread and that these nucleotides are easily
incorporated into DNA by replicative polymerases .
This work was supported by NSF grant MCB-0115188 to R.P.C .
We thank Mary Berlyn of the E . coli Genetic Stock Center, Alexandros
Kiupakis, Martin Marinus, Robert Osuna, Roel Schaaper, and Bernard
Weiss for providing bacterial strains .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Biological Sciences, University at Albany, SUNY, 1400 Washington Ave., Albany,
NY 12222 . Phone: (518) 442-4331 . Fax: (518) 442-4767 . E-mail: moose@albany.edu .
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