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. 1987 Jul;116(3):343–347. doi: 10.1093/genetics/116.3.343

Spontaneous Mutations Occur near Dam Recognition Sites in a dam-Escherichia coli Host

Margaretha Carraway 1,2, Philip Youderian 1,2, M G Marinus 1,2
PMCID: PMC1203145  PMID: 3301526

Abstract

The mismatch repair system of Escherichia coli K12 removes mispaired bases from DNA. Mismatch repair can occur on either strand of DNA if it lacks N6-methyladenines within 5'-GATC-3' sequences. In hemimethylated heteroduplexes, repair occurs preferentially on the unmethylated strand. If both strands are fully methylated, repair is inhibited. Mutant (dam-) strains of E. coli defective in the adenine methylase that recognizes 5'-GATC-3' sequences (Dam), and therefore defective in mismatch repair, show increased spontaneous mutation rates compared to otherwise isogenic dam+ hosts. We have isolated and characterized 91 independent mutations that arise as a consequence of the Dam- defect in a plasmid-borne phage P22 repressor gene, mnt. The majority of these mutations are A:T→G:C transitions that occur within six base pairs of the two 5'-GATC-3' sequences in the mnt gene. In contrast, the spectrum of mnt- mutations in a dam+ host is comprised of a majority of insertions of IS elements and deletions that do not cluster near Dam recognition sites. These results show that Dam-directed post-replicative mismatch repair plays a significant role in the rectification of potential transition mutations in vivo, and suggest that sequences associated with Dam recognition sites are particularly prone to replication or repair errors.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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