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Journal of Bacteriology, August 2004, p . 4838-4843, Vol . 186,
No . 15
Adaptive Point Mutation and Adaptive Amplification Pathways in the
Escherichia coli Lac System: Stress Responses Producing Genetic Change
Susan M . Rosenberg1,2,3* and P . J .
Hastings1
Departments of Molecular and Human Genetics,1 Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology,2 Molecular Virology and Microbiology, Baylor
College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030-34113
Evolution by natural selection includes two main steps: the
generation of heritable variations (e.g., mutations) and the
differential proliferation of the variants in the environment . When
the neo-Darwinists synthesized a modern view of natural selection and
genetics in the early 20th century, they specified a simplifying
assumption that Darwin (12) had not: that the
rates of formation of mutations would be independent of exposure to
selective environments (e.g., see reference 47) . Thus,
evolution, and the mutations driving it, should be constant and
gradual . That some spontaneous mutations form independently of
interaction with the environment is certainly true (42,
46, 52; see also many
subsequent papers) . These form before an organism encounters a
selective environment, with a definable relationship to cell
divisions ("growth-dependent mutations"), probably because many
result from DNA replication errors . However, work with several
microbial assay systems indicates the existence of additional
mutation pathways that appear to be induced in response to the
environment (reviewed in references 16, 58,
and 60) . These mutation mechanisms, called
stationary-phase or stress-induced mutation, operate specifically
under growth-limiting stress and may sometimes produce mutations that
confer a growth advantage in the growth-limiting environment, called
adaptive mutations . The problem is, are they really something
different from growth-dependent mutations?
WHICH MODEL?
Three general models for the origin of apparent adaptive mutations
have garnered intense interest because of their evolutionary
implications (reviewed in references 10, 16,
58, and 60) . Directed mutation
(DM) models suggested the provocative possibility that mutations
might be targeted specifically to those that relieve the stress
(e.g., see reference 9), an idea tinged with Lamarckism .
In hypermutation (HM) models, mutation rates increase genome
wide in response to stress, stimulating both nonadaptive and adaptive
mutations (e.g., see references 25, 53,
58, and 70 and see also
references 13 and 55), in harmony with
Darwinism but appearing incompatible with the neo-Darwinist
constraint of constant, gradual evolutionary change (implying
constant mutation rates) (e.g., see reference 47) .
Cryptic-growth (CG) models specify constant mutation rates (in
accordance with the neo-Darwinist constraint) but that extra DNA
replications (not observed by the investigator) in rare growing cells
give the appearance of enhanced mutation under stress and even of
mutagenesis targeted to selected genes (e.g., see references
2, 23, 34,
43, 44, and 54) . These
general models, and the evolutionary consequences, can be
distinguished by elucidating the molecular mechanism(s) of the
mutagenesis . In their simplest form, CG models predict mutation
mechanisms identical to those of growth-dependent mutation, whereas
DM and HM models predict different mechanisms of mutation, one
directed preferentially to selected genes (DM models) and the other
affecting many genes (HM models) .
MANY MECHANISMS AND HYPERMUTATION AS A GENERAL
STRATEGY
No single mutational mechanism underlies the many cases of stationary-phase
mutations reported for different bacteria and for yeasts . A
variety of molecular mechanisms that appear different from growth-dependent
mutation are implicated (though some similarities in the stationary-phase
mechanisms are becoming apparent) (reviewed in references
16, 58, and 60; see also
references 32 and 33) . This discourages
CG models for these systems . Implying that HM is a general,
multimechanism strategy of bacteria, the vast majority of 787 natural
isolates of Escherichia coli from diverse habitats worldwide
display variable levels of increased general mutability under
starvation (3) . (CG models are unlikely to be responsible for
the appearance of increased mutation frequencies in the starved,
aging colonies in this assay because, for the small number of
strains in which the genetic requirements of stress-induced mutation
was examined, these differed from the genetic requirements for
growth-dependent mutation in those strains [3,
67], arguing against standard growth-dependent mutation
mechanisms having occurred.) Additional data suggest that HM
mechanisms speed evolution in the real world, regardless of whether
HM mechanisms were selected for that group benefit or as an
incidental by-product of error-prone DNA metabolism processes
selected for other reasons (3) . Thus, HM appears to
be a general bacterial strategy .
THE E . COLI Lac SYSTEM
The most mechanistic information is known about the E . coli
Lac frameshift-reversion system (8), for which HM models
(e.g., see references 41, 45,
58, and 69) and CG models (e.g., see
references 2 and 34) are currently
under debate . In this assay, cells in which the chromosomal lac
operon is deleted and which carry the lacIZ33 +1 frameshift
allele on an F' conjugative plasmid are plated on minimal lactose
medium, selecting Lac+ frameshift reversion mutants (8) .
Growth-dependent Lac+ revertants formed before plating are
visible as colonies by about 2 days of incubation (Fig .
1) . Additional Lac+ colonies arise over the next
several days (Fig . 1) from a population of cells showing
no net growth (8) . These are adaptive mutants formed
after exposure to the lactose starvation medium (8,
30, 50) .
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FIG . 1 . Adaptive point mutation and adaptive gene amplification are
separate outcomes that arise with different kinetics . Point mutants have
compensatory frameshift reversions in the lac gene (19,
61) and also carry high frequencies of other
mutations genome wide (24, 57,
70) . lac-amplified clones carry 20 to 50
tandem repeats of 7- to 40-kb DNA segments spanning the leaky lac
frameshift allele, which allow growth on lactose medium without a
compensatory frameshift mutation (30) . lac-amplified
clones do not carry high levels of extra mutations genome wide (30) .
Shown is a cumulative plot . The lac-amplified clones comprise
typically
40%
of new colonies from day 8 onward (30) . Data are from
reference 30.
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POINT MUTANTS AND AMPLIFIED ADAPTIVE Lac+
COLONIES
Two distinct classes of adaptive revertants are seen (Fig . 1):
compensatory frameshift revertants (Lac+ point mutants) (19,
61) and strains carrying gene amplification of the
leaky lacIZ33 allele as 20 to 50 tandem copies of 7- to 40-kb,
F'-carried repeats (lac-amplified clones) (30) .
These allow growth on lactose medium without a compensatory
frameshift mutation (30; see references
2, 18, 36, and
68 for previous descriptions of lac amplification) .
Although rare initially, lac-amplified clones constitute
40%
of new colonies from day 8 onward, a major adaptive outcome in
this system (30) .
DIFFERENT MECHANISMS EXCLUDE SIMPLE CRYPTIC-GROWTH
MODELS
Whereas simple CG models predict the same mutation mechanism(s)
for growth-dependent and adaptive reversions, DM and HM models
predict different mechanisms . Both the point mutations (19,
61) and amplifications (30) are
different from growth-dependent Lac+ reversions (19,
61) and form via different mechanisms (see below)
arguing against simple CG models . For point mutation, DM models are
untenable because mutations accumulate in genes other than lac
(5, 17, 24,
57, 70; discussed below), whereas
HM models are supported by many aspects of the mutation mechanism
as follows .
POINT MUTATION MECHANISM: ERROR-PRONE DNA
DOUBLE-STRAND-BREAK REPAIR IMPLICATED
The proteins for double-strand-break repair by homologous recombination
are required for adaptive and not growth-dependent Lac frameshift
reversions (22, 28,
29) . We suggested that error-prone repair of DNA double-strand
breaks or ends could generate adaptive point mutants (28) .
F-transfer proteins, but not conjugative transfer of the F'
plasmid, are also required for point mutation (20,
21, 23) . Single-strand nicks
made at the transfer origin could lead to high levels of
double-strand ends on the F' plasmid, promoting Lac+
reversion by error-prone repair there (22, 40,
56, 59) . Supporting this idea,
double-strand-break-repair-protein-dependent mutations also
accumulate in the E . coli chromosome (5) but
at a roughly 20-fold lower frequency than in the F' plasmid (17) .
This suggests that the same mechanism operates in both places but is
more active in F', probably because frequent single-strand nicks
yield more double-strand breaks and ends there (5,
59) . (Repair by homologous recombination should be
available even to stationary-phase cells, roughly 40% of which
contain more than one chromosome [and the fraction with more than one
F' plasmid is likely to be higher] [1] . Duplicated
genome segments are also reasonable candidates for partner DNA for
homologous double-strand-break repair.) But double-strand ends also
arise in the chromosome and must be repaired there (e.g., see
reference 11) . We suggest that during starvation
stress, a mutagenic stress response leads to their repair being error
prone, promoting mutation (5) as follows .
SOS RESPONSE, ERROR-PRONE DNA POLYMERASE, AND
DECREASED MISMATCH REPAIR PROMOTE POINT MUTATION
A salient feature of HM models is that they propose stress responses
that increase the general mutation rate specifically during the
stress . The classical mutagenic stress response of E . coli is
the SOS DNA damage response (66) . SOS induction is required
specifically for adaptive (and not growth-dependent) point mutation
(8, 48) as is the SOS-regulated,
error-prone DNA polymerase DinB (Pol IV) (14,
49, 51) . DinB is responsible for
85%
of the point mutations (49) . Neither SOS nor DinB
is required for adaptive amplification (49) . Also
contributing to general HM in the point mutation mechanism, the
postreplicative mismatch repair system becomes limiting transiently
during adaptive mutation (27; but also see
references 15 and 26) . This could be
caused by mismatch repair being overwhelmed by excess DNA polymerase
errors (27) made by DinB (14,
49) . However limiting mismatch repair activity
occurs, the combination of an error-prone DNA polymerase and limiting
mismatch repair is expected to be mutagenic genome wide, supporting
HM models .
POINT MUTATION IS NOT DIRECTED MUTATION
Two kinds of studies show that point mutation is not directed to
the lac gene . First, while Lac+ revertants accumulate in
the population of starving cells, unselected mutations (reversions
of a tet frameshift allele) also accumulate both in a tet
gene near lac in the F' plasmid (17) and in
a chromosomal tet gene (5) . These form via
the same double-strand-break-repair-protein- and DinB-dependent
mechanism as Lac+ point mutations in F', although the
frequency of the chromosomal reversions is
20-fold
lower (perhaps because Tra-promoted double-strand ends in F'
are more frequent than chromosomal double-strand breaks, as discussed
above) . Second, Lac+ point mutants carry high frequencies
of unselected mutations, as follows .
GENOME-WIDE HYPERMUTATION IN A CELL SUBPOPULATION
(POINT MUTANTS ONLY)
The Lac+ point mutants carry high frequencies of unselected
(secondary) mutations throughout their genomes,
50-fold
higher than their Lac– neighbors starved on the same
selective medium, which are similar to never-starved cells (24,
57, 70) . Thus, only a
subpopulation of the starved cells is hypermutated . This, plus the
evidence in the previous section, is considered by most authors to
have ruled out DM models and provided strong support for HM models
for point mutation . The adaptive amplified clones are not similarly
hypermutated and so do not descend from the same subpopulation (30) .
The hypermutation that these subpopulation cells experience is
transient (24, 57, 62,
70) . What makes the subpopulation different from
the main population is not known . Proposals include the suggestion
that subpopulation cells are those that acquire DNA double-strand
breaks (70) or induce an SOS response (48),
leading to increased dinB expression (14,
49), or amplify the dinB gene, leading to
its overexpression (39, 64) . Any of these
mechanisms, if they generated most Lac+ point mutants, would
indicate an HM mechanism .
DOES THE HYPERMUTABLE SUBPOPULATION GENERATE MOST Lac+
POINT MUTANTS?
The question of whether the hypermutable subpopulation generates
most Lac+ point mutants is critical for distinguishing HM models
from current CG models (e.g., see references 34 and
64), which demand that most Lac+ not
come from cells with an elevated mutation rate . It has been suggested
that only 10% of the point mutants descend from the hypermutable cell
subpopulation, the other 90% arising from cells not engaging in
transient hypermutation (57) . The 90% could then
generate point mutants with no change in mutation rate via a CG model
(63, 65) . The idea is that some
point mutants appear to contain more detectable secondary mutations
than others (though the data on this are very few [57,
70]), so perhaps they have come from the
hypermutable subpopulation whereas the others did not . This is
possible, but not proven . However, suggesting that 90% of point
mutations occur in cells with "normal" mutation rates is not
compatible with
85%
of point mutants requiring an SOS response (49),
DinB (49), and limiting mismatch repair (27) .
Thus, a simpler hypothesis is that the vast majority of Lac+
point mutants arose by a single HM mechanism but that those with more
secondary mutations remained in the transient mutable state longer
before becoming Lac+ and exiting that state (Fig.
2) and so acquired more detectable secondary
mutations (5, 6) . Either different mutation
rates, or different lengths of time spent being hypermutable, can
account for the data . We suggest that the second possibility is
simpler because it offers a single point mutation mechanism (HM) for
most point mutants (5, 6,
58), which is harmonious with the requirements for
DinB, SOS, and limiting mismatch repair for most point mutants (but
see Fig . 2 for an alternative two-population model) .
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FIG . 2 . A stress-response (HM) model for adaptive point mutation and
amplification (modified from references 30,
45, and 58) . Starvation is
proposed to promote RpoS-dependent stress responses that make the
normally high-fidelity process of DNA double-strand-break repair (DSBR)
error prone in two different ways . (A) Version I: in a small
subpopulation of cells, genome-wide hypermutation is caused by
high-level expression of the error-prone DNA polymerase DinB (Pol IV) (66,
71), which is upregulated both by the SOS response (37,
38) and also by RpoS (41), the
stationary-phase and general stress-response transcription ( )
factor (35) required both for adaptive point mutation
and amplification (45) . Also in this population,
mismatch repair becomes limiting transiently, perhaps via saturation by
excess DNA polymerase errors (27) made by DinB (14,
49) . The outcome is genome-wide hypermutation
wherever DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) or ends (DSEs) are formed and
repaired . (Because more DSEs form in the F' plasmid than in the
chromosome, due to single-strand nicks made at the F transfer origin,
there is more mutation on F' [17] than on the
chromosome [5], but the chromosome still experiences
DSBR-protein- and DinB-dependent stationary-phase point mutations [5]
because it still sometimes has DSEs to repair.) Version II: an
alternative version (not drawn) of this idea, compatible with the
hypothesis that two cell populations generate point mutations (57)
(discussed in the text), is that both populations have a mutagenic
stress response leading to increased DinB . (This is necessary because
most point mutations [85%] are DinB dependent) . However, one population
is less mutable than the other only because it has less DinB, because,
e.g., it experiences only RpoS, but not SOS, induction of DinB, whereas
the other experiences both and makes more DinB (and then also saturates
mismatch repair), making it more mutable . This alternative is more
complicated than version I, but possible . (B) We suggest that
amplification is provoked by error-prone DSBR of a different sort: that
DNA synthesis primed during DSBR lacks the controls of replication from
an origin and in starving cells is slower and more likely to stall due
to limiting nucleotides . We suggest that upon stalling, template
switching occurs (similar to recombination models discussed in reference
7; see also reference 72) . This can
produce a novel junction sequence in the DNA that leads to amplification
either via promoting rolling circle replication or generating a
duplication that amplifies to many copies by recombination (illustrated
in reference 31) . Because adaptive amplification is
SOS and DinB independent (49), the role played by
RpoS in adaptive amplification cannot be to up-regulate DinB (45) .
RpoS may play different roles in point mutation and amplification (45).
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POINT MUTATION AND AMPLIFICATION ARE RpoS-DEPENDENT
STRESS RESPONSES— A STRESS-RESPONSE (HM) MODEL
Finally, both adaptive point mutation and amplification are stress
responses requiring the stationary-phase and general-stress-response
transcription ( )
factor, RpoS (45) . (This conclusion was also
reached in reference 41; however, that paper did not show
that the decreased yield of Lac+ colonies for rpoS
mutants is not caused by any of several possible artifactual
explanations discussed in references 4 and
45 and ruled out in reference 45.) This
is incompatible with CG models, in which mutations occur because
some cells are growing (not in stationary phase) and not undergoing
a stress response (e.g., see references 2 and
34) . This strongly supports HM models such as that
shown in Fig . 2, in which both point mutation and
genome rearrangement (amplification) are stress responses that are
induced by starvation and turned off if cells happen to generate a
mutation or amplification that allows them to grow in the
growth-limiting environment . We have drawn amplification and point
mutation as a branched pathway with RpoS acting early (Fig.
2) because of the known role of the RpoS regulon
early during entry into stationary phase (35), but
whether they are a branched pathway or two separate pathways is not
yet determined . They are clearly two separate outcomes (Fig.
1) (30, 49), in contrast
with the following model .
AMPLIFICATION MUTAGENESIS— A CRYPTIC-GROWTH MODEL
Amplification mutagenesis (AM) is a CG model that seeks to generate
adaptive mutants without an increase in mutation rate (2,
34), as per the neo-Darwinist constraint . In AM,
amplification of lac is a precursor to mutation, not a
separate outcome . Mutations are proposed to occur in cells that are
able to grow, forming small (micro)colonies, as a result of a
preexisting duplication of the leaky lac allele (2,
34) . During growth, more copies of lac
accumulate (by amplification and growth of the colony), which
increases the likelihood of a point mutation occurring in one of the
copies . Subsequent replication, deamplification, and segregation
would yield a cell that has acquired a Lac+ point mutation and lost
the amplified DNA . No special features other than growth and
replication are supposed to contribute to most Lac+
adaptive point mutations . To explain genome-wide hypermutation (6,
24, 57, 70), one
version of AM proposes that amplified DNA per se induces the SOS
response and DinB, which would also enhance Lac+ mutation
(34) . In another version, genome-wide
hypermutation is caused by rare coamplification of dinB with
lac (64) . Both versions specify the important
constraint that only hypermutation of unselected genes, and not most
Lac+ adaptive point mutation, is caused by the increase in
DinB error-prone polymerase . One way that this could be achieved
would be if only 10% of point mutants originate in the hypermutable
subpopulation whereas 90% originate from other cells with standard
mutation rates .
THE AMPLIFICATION MUTAGENESIS MODEL DOES NOT FIT THE
DATA
Most adaptive mutations require an error-prone DNA polymerase.
Eighty-five percent of point mutations require the DinB/Pol IV
error-prone polymerase (49), whereas standard spontaneous
growth-dependent Lac+ reversions do not (49,
51) . This is incompatible with the idea that
normal mutation rates (from normal generation-dependent replication
errors) produce most adaptive mutations . If the AM model were to
depart from this and invoke excess DinB for most point mutations, it
would then be another HM model (similar to that shown in Fig.
2) .
Selective growth with lac amplification is not sufficient to
produce point mutants. In the AM model, a key feature is that growth
with lac amplification is sufficient to produce point mutants;
no special conditions or stress responses are allowed (2,
34, 65) . Several tests of this
idea have failed to support it . First, when cells containing lac
amplification were replated on lactose, only 1 of 680 resulting Lac+
colonies contained a point mutation, indicating that amplification
does not promote point mutation (30) to the extent that the
model demands . More than 23,000 cells from the 680 colonies
were assayed (30), precluding sampling error as a likely
reason for the failure to detect point mutants .
lac-amplified clones not "channeled" into point mutation by
DNA polymerase errors. If amplifications were the major intermediate
converted by DNA polymerase errors into point mutations, as the AM
model specifies (34), then decreasing polymerase
errors (by blocking SOS induction or knocking out dinB) should
not only decrease point mutations but should increase the
amplification component of the curve (Fig . 1)
proportionately . The point mutants lost should remain amplified and
so contribute to the numbers of amplified colonies . This is not
observed: both SOS and dinB defects decrease numbers of point
mutants dramatically ( 85%)
without increasing lac-amplified clones (49) .
These data support models such as that shown in Fig . 2,
in which the channeling of DNA intermediates into either the
amplification or point mutation pathway occurs at a step before
generation of amplified DNA and in which lac amplification
allows growth, deflecting cells from a mutagenic stress response .
Amplification is neither mutagenic nor associated with general
hypermutation (30). This contradicts two versions of the
AM model (2, 34) .
Lac adaptive mutation is a stress response, not a consequence of CG.
As discussed above, Lac+ point mutation and amplification require
the stationary-phase and general stress response transcription
factor, RpoS (45) . This indicates that both are stress
responses and also that they occur in stationary-phase (not actively
growing) cells . The AM model specifies that Lac+ adaptive
mutation is not a stress response and is a consequence of growth (2,
34, 65) .
By contrast, all data reported so far are compatible with a
branched-pathway, stress-responsive HM model (Fig . 2) in which
either point mutation or amplification can lead to adaptive Lac+
colony formation, rapid growth, and cessation of the genome-altering
stress responses . The process looks Darwinian but without the
constraint of more conservative neo-Darwinists that mutation rates
stay constant .
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We gratefully acknowledge stimulating discussions with Ichizo
Kobayashi, Hisaji Maki, Ivan Matic, Suzanne Rutherford, and John
Cairns and with Rebecca Ponder and Andrew Slack, whose unpublished
data contributed to the ideas in this paper . We thank Rob Dorit and
Mary-Jane Lombardo for improving the manuscript .
This work was supported by Public Health Service grants R01-GM53158
(to S.M.R.) and R01-GM64022 (to P.J.H.) .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department of
Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine, One Baylor Plaza,
BCM-S809A Mail Stop BCM225, Houston, TX 77030-3411 . Phone: 713-798-6924 . Fax:
713-798-8967 . E-mail: smr@bcm.tmc.edu.
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