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Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli

Adaptive mutation refers to the continuous outgrowth of new mutants from a non-dividing cell population during selection, in apparent violation of the neo-Darwinian principle that mutation precedes selection. One explanation is that of retromutagenesis, in which a DNA lesion causes a transcriptional...

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Autores principales: Morreall, Jordan, Kim, Alice, Liu, Yuan, Degtyareva, Natalya, Weiss, Bernard, Doetsch, Paul W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4548950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26305558
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005477
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author Morreall, Jordan
Kim, Alice
Liu, Yuan
Degtyareva, Natalya
Weiss, Bernard
Doetsch, Paul W.
author_facet Morreall, Jordan
Kim, Alice
Liu, Yuan
Degtyareva, Natalya
Weiss, Bernard
Doetsch, Paul W.
author_sort Morreall, Jordan
collection PubMed
description Adaptive mutation refers to the continuous outgrowth of new mutants from a non-dividing cell population during selection, in apparent violation of the neo-Darwinian principle that mutation precedes selection. One explanation is that of retromutagenesis, in which a DNA lesion causes a transcriptional mutation that yields a mutant protein, allowing escape from selection. This enables a round of DNA replication that establishes heritability. Because the model requires that gene expression precedes DNA replication, it predicts that during selection, new mutants will arise from damage only to the transcribed DNA strand. As a test, we used a lacZ amber mutant of Escherichia coli that can revert by nitrous acid-induced deamination of adenine residues on either strand of the TAG stop codon, each causing different DNA mutations. When stationary-phase, mutagenized cells were grown in rich broth before being plated on lactose-selective media, only non-transcribed strand mutations appeared in the revertants. This result was consistent with the known high sensitivity to deamination of the single-stranded DNA in a transcription bubble, and it provided an important control because it demonstrated that the genetic system we would use to detect transcribed-strand mutations could also detect a bias toward the non-transcribed strand. When residual lacZ transcription was blocked beforehand by catabolite repression, both strands were mutated about equally, but if revertants were selected immediately after nitrous acid exposure, transcribed-strand mutations predominated among the revertants, implicating retromutagenesis as the mechanism. This result was not affected by gene orientation. Retromutagenesis is apt to be a universal method of evolutionary adaptation, which enables the emergence of new mutants from mutations acquired during counterselection rather than beforehand, and it may have roles in processes as diverse as the development of antibiotic resistance and neoplasia.
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spelling pubmed-45489502015-09-01 Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli Morreall, Jordan Kim, Alice Liu, Yuan Degtyareva, Natalya Weiss, Bernard Doetsch, Paul W. PLoS Genet Research Article Adaptive mutation refers to the continuous outgrowth of new mutants from a non-dividing cell population during selection, in apparent violation of the neo-Darwinian principle that mutation precedes selection. One explanation is that of retromutagenesis, in which a DNA lesion causes a transcriptional mutation that yields a mutant protein, allowing escape from selection. This enables a round of DNA replication that establishes heritability. Because the model requires that gene expression precedes DNA replication, it predicts that during selection, new mutants will arise from damage only to the transcribed DNA strand. As a test, we used a lacZ amber mutant of Escherichia coli that can revert by nitrous acid-induced deamination of adenine residues on either strand of the TAG stop codon, each causing different DNA mutations. When stationary-phase, mutagenized cells were grown in rich broth before being plated on lactose-selective media, only non-transcribed strand mutations appeared in the revertants. This result was consistent with the known high sensitivity to deamination of the single-stranded DNA in a transcription bubble, and it provided an important control because it demonstrated that the genetic system we would use to detect transcribed-strand mutations could also detect a bias toward the non-transcribed strand. When residual lacZ transcription was blocked beforehand by catabolite repression, both strands were mutated about equally, but if revertants were selected immediately after nitrous acid exposure, transcribed-strand mutations predominated among the revertants, implicating retromutagenesis as the mechanism. This result was not affected by gene orientation. Retromutagenesis is apt to be a universal method of evolutionary adaptation, which enables the emergence of new mutants from mutations acquired during counterselection rather than beforehand, and it may have roles in processes as diverse as the development of antibiotic resistance and neoplasia. Public Library of Science 2015-08-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4548950/ /pubmed/26305558 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005477 Text en © 2015 Morreall et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Morreall, Jordan
Kim, Alice
Liu, Yuan
Degtyareva, Natalya
Weiss, Bernard
Doetsch, Paul W.
Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli
title Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli
title_full Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli
title_fullStr Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli
title_short Evidence for Retromutagenesis as a Mechanism for Adaptive Mutation in Escherichia coli
title_sort evidence for retromutagenesis as a mechanism for adaptive mutation in escherichia coli
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4548950/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26305558
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1005477
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