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Vol. 180, Issue 13, 3345-3352, July 1, 1998
Induction of the SOS Response Increases the
Efficiency of Global Nucleotide Excision Repair of Cyclobutane
Pyrimidine Dimers, but Not 6-4 Photoproducts, in UV-Irradiated
Escherichia coli
David J.
Crowley* and
Philip C.
Hanawalt
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford
University, Stanford, California 94305-5020
 |
ABSTRACT |
Nucleotide excision repair (NER) is responsible for the removal of
a variety of lesions from damaged DNA and proceeds through two
subpathways, global repair and transcription-coupled repair. In
Escherichia coli, both subpathways require UvrA and UvrB,
which are induced following DNA damage as part of the SOS response. We
found that elimination of the SOS response either genetically or by
treatment with the transcription inhibitor rifampin reduced the
efficiency of global repair of the major UV-induced lesion, the
cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD), but had no effect on the global
repair of 6-4 photoproducts. Mutants in which the SOS response was
constitutively derepressed repaired CPDs more rapidly than did
wild-type cells, and this rate was not affected by rifampin. Transcription-coupled repair of CPDs occurred in the absence of SOS
induction but was undetectable when the response was expressed constitutively. These results suggest that damage-inducible synthesis of UvrA and UvrB is necessary for efficient repair of CPDs and that the
levels of these proteins determine the rate of NER of UV photoproducts.
We compare our findings with recent data from eukaryotic systems and
suggest that damage-inducible stress responses are generally critical
for efficient global repair of certain types of genomic damage.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Exposing DNA to short-wavelength UV
light leads to the formation of two major lesions, the cyclobutane
pyrimidine dimer (CPD) and the pyrimidine(6-4)pyrimidone photoproduct
(6-4PP). These lesions, as well as those caused by other environmental
agents, can have deleterious cellular effects if allowed to persist in the genome. Therefore, it is not surprising that cells possess a
variety of mechanisms to recognize and remove damage from DNA efficiently. A common cellular process for repairing many types of
bulky DNA lesions, including 6-4PPs and CPDs, is nucleotide excision
repair (NER), which involves recognition, removal, and resynthesis of
the damaged stretch of DNA. This process has been documented in several
different organisms, but its molecular mechanism is best understood in
the prokaryote Escherichia coli.
NER in E. coli requires six proteins: UvrA, UvrB, UvrC,
UvrD, DNA polymerase I, and ligase (11, 37). In vivo, UvrA
is present as both a monomer and a dimer, the latter complexing with UvrB to perform initial DNA damage recognition. This UvrA2B
heterotrimer may carry out limited, ATP-dependent, processive scanning
of the damaged region until the actual damage site is encountered
(14). At this point, a conformational change occurs in the
protein-DNA complex, leading to release of the UvrA dimer, stable
UvrB-DNA binding, and a local bending and unwinding of the damaged
region of DNA. UvrC then binds to the UvrB-DNA complex, unmasking the cryptic endonuclease activity of UvrB. In the case of UV photoproducts, this activity causes an incision to be made four bases 3' to the lesion. A second incision is made by the UvrBC complex seven bases 5'
to the lesion. UvrD, also known as DNA helicase II, releases UvrC and
the oligonucleotide between the dual incisions, leaving UvrB at a
12-base gap on one strand. DNA polymerase I fills the gap and
dissociates the UvrB protein from the DNA. The repair process is
completed by DNA ligase, which seals the nick.
NER can be separated into two subpathways, global repair and
transcription-coupled repair. Global repair is the process by which
most lesions are repaired regardless of their location in the genome.
Transcription-coupled repair is characterized by the more rapid
repair of lesions in the transcribed strand of an expressed gene than in the nontranscribed strand or in the rest of the genome (28, 29). In E. coli, both subpathways require
the full set of NER proteins, but transcription-coupled repair
additionally requires actively transcribing RNA polymerase (RNAP) and
at least one additional factor, the transcription repair coupling
factor, encoded by the mfd gene (27, 42). The
latter factor is thought to recruit Uvr proteins to RNAP arrested at a
lesion on the transcribed strand (41), resulting in rapid
repair of the transcription-blocking lesion. In mfd mutants,
this enhanced repair is abolished and repair of the transcribed strand
occurs at the lower but efficient global rate (27).
In E. coli, DNA damage leads to the induction of a set of
pleiotropic genes in a process known as the SOS response
(46). This stress response is mediated by the RecA and LexA
proteins, which operate as a coprotease and a transcriptional
repressor, respectively. Upon damage to DNA, a signal (probably
single-stranded DNA) that activates the RecA coprotease activity is
generated. Activated RecA facilitates the cleavage of LexA repressor,
which binds to the operators of several different genes, including
uvrA, uvrB, and uvrD. Cleavage of LexA
leads to their derepression and results in an increase in the amounts
of these proteins in the cell, the extent of which is determined by the
persistence of RecA activity and the strength of the inducible
promoters (46). In the case of uvrA,
uvrB, and uvrD, the derepression is rapid due to
the relatively weak binding of LexA to their operator regions (1,
18, 38). The rapid induction of these three NER proteins suggests
that they may be needed at higher levels to repair DNA damage
efficiently and, ultimately, to allow the cell to recover from genomic
injury.
Studies of the relevance of SOS-dependent protein induction to NER have
produced conflicting results. Castellazzi et al. (5) showed
that recA441 mutants, grown at 41°C to induce the SOS
response, had an enhanced UV survival compared to an isogenic
recA+ strain under the same conditions. The
enhanced survival depended on de novo protein synthesis and the
presence of wild-type uvrA. Similarly, Ganesan and Hanawalt
(12) found enhanced repair of CPDs when cells possessing a
thermolabile LexA repressor were grown at the restrictive temperature.
The same study also showed that lexA+ cells with
a deletion of recA had a significantly lower rate of CPD
repair than an isogenic wild-type strain. These results suggest that
the SOS response is required for efficient repair of CPDs and provide
evidence for an inducible repair system dependent on wild-type excision
repair activity. In contrast, Masek et al. (25) showed that
cells carrying the SOS noninducible lexA3(Ind
)
allele had only a small reduction in the rate of repair of CPDs induced
by UV at 70 J/m2 compared to wild-type cells. Similarly,
others have reported no reduction in the rate of CPD removal when cells
were treated with the protein synthesis inhibitor chloramphenicol after
UV (7, 22).
Our initial observation that treating wild-type cells with the RNAP
inhibitor rifampin not only eliminated transcription-coupled repair but
also reduced global repair of CPDs led us to undertake a detailed
examination of the effects of SOS induction on NER of both CPDs and
6-4PPs. Our results revealed that efficient repair of CPDs in
nontranscribed regions of the genome depended on the induction of the
SOS response. However, neither transcription-coupled repair of CPDs nor
global repair of 6-4PPs required SOS induction. We measured the basal
and induced levels of UvrA and UvrB proteins and found that their
SOS-dependent induction was coincident with the repair of CPDs.
Correlating repair protein levels with the kinetics of both
transcription-coupled and global repair of UV lesions illustrated that
cells selectively repaired 6-4PPs and transcription-blocking lesions
compared to global CPDs when NER capacity was low. We consider this
damage recognition hierarchy and the implications of global stress
responses for NER in both bacteria and eukaryotic systems.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Bacterial strains.
E. coli K-12 HL108 is a thyA
deoC derivative of W3110 (2). Strain HL942 is a
lexA3(Ind
) derivative of HL108. The relevant
genotype of GW1010 is recA441 sfiA11 (17). We
constructed strain HL940 by P1 transduction of the
lexA71(Def) allele (20) from strain JL1470
(obtained from J. W. Little) into GW1010. We obtained strain
DM1187 from David Mount via Graham Walker. The relevant genotype of
DM1187 is recA441 sfiA11 lexA51(Def) (32).
Cell growth and DNA preparation.
HL108 and HL942 were grown
at 37°C in Davis minimal salts supplemented with 0.4% glucose and 10 mg of thymine per ml. To label the DNA, cells were grown in medium
containing 1 µCi of [3H]thymine per ml in addition to
the nonradioactive thymine. All recA441 strains were grown
at 32°C in the above medium additionally supplemented with 0.2%
Casamino Acids and 1 mg of vitamin B1 per ml. Cultures were
grown to saturation and subcultured in fresh medium supplemented with 1 mM isopropyl-
-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG). Cultures were
grown to mid-log phase (approximately 3 × 108
cells/ml) as measured by optical density at 600 nm. Cells were collected by filtration on 0.45-µm-pore-size Millipore filters, washed with prewarmed Davis medium, and resuspended in TE (10 mM Tris,
1 mM EDTA [pH 7.5]) at one-fourth the initial volume of the culture.
This suspension was incubated in a shaking water bath for 3 min, during
which time the EDTA rendered cells permeable to rifampin (21,
35). Concentrated medium was added to the cells to produce 1×
final concentration, and incubation was continued for 10 min. Rifampin
(Calbiochem) was dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide at a concentration of
50 mg/ml and added to the cultures to a final concentration of 50 µg/ml, a dose that inhibits all transcription as measured by
[3H]uracil incorporation (data not shown). Control
cultures were treated with dimethyl sulfoxide alone. After 10 min of
incubation, cells were collected on Millipore filters, washed with warm
Davis medium, and resuspended in Davis medium containing 1 mM IPTG. Cells were UV irradiated with a dose of 40 J/m2 and placed
in a flask containing growth supplements. Samples of the culture were
removed at various times and mixed with an equal volume of ice-cold NET
(100 mM NaCl, 10 mM Tris [pH 8.0], 10 mM EDTA) buffer. Cells were
pelleted by centrifugation at 4°C and resuspended in TE (pH 8.0). A
sample of cells was taken for preparation of cell extracts for Western
blotting. The remaining cells were lysed by addition of lysozyme (to 1 mg/ml) and RNase A (to 100 mg/ml) and incubation for 15 min at 37°C.
Proteinase K (to 100 mg/ml) and Sarkosyl (to 0.5%) were then added,
and the mixture was incubated at 50°C for 1 h. The DNA was
extracted with phenol-chloroform and precipitated with 2.5 M ammonium
acetate and 2 volumes of 95% ethanol. Purified DNA was resuspended in TE (pH 8.0). A portion of each DNA sample was incubated with
SstII and ApaI restriction enzymes as instructed
by the manufacturer (Gibco-BRL). The remaining DNA was lightly
sonicated in a Branson sonifier, and the concentration was determined
by fluorometry using Hoechst 33258 (4). The radioactivity in
3H-labeled DNA was quantified by scintillation
spectrometry.
Repair of CPDs in lactose operon.
The frequency of CPDs in
the individual strands of the lactose operon was determined by an
established method (27, 28). DNA restricted with
ApaI and SstII was quantified as described above,
and 300 ng of each sample was treated or mock treated with T4
endonuclease V in NET buffer containing 1 mg of bovine serum albumin
per ml. Samples were electrophoresed overnight in alkaline gels
containing 1% agarose. DNA was transferred to Hybond N+ membranes by
Southern blotting and hybridized with 32P-labeled probes.
Strand-specific RNA probes were generated according to the protocol of
Promega, using plasmid pZH10 (28) as a template. Detection
was performed with a Bio-Rad phosphorimager and its associated
Molecular Analyst software. The frequency of CPDs per 6.6-kb
restriction fragment was calculated from the percentage of fragments
with no CPDs (zero class), using the Poisson expression (
ln of the
zero class = average number of dimers per fragment).
Immunoassay for global NER.
The repair of CPDs and 6-4PPs
was measured by using an immunoassay (19). Following
denaturation by boiling, 50 ng (CPD) or 500 ng (6-4PP) of each DNA
sample was loaded in triplicate onto a Hybond N+ membrane, using a slot
blot apparatus. The membrane was incubated for 2 h in the presence
of a mouse antibody against either CPDs (TDM-2) or 6-4PPs (64M-2)
diluted 1:2,000 in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (antibodies were a
generous gift of Toshio Mori [31]). Horseradish
peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies were used at a dilution of
1:5,000 and detected with an enhanced chemiluminescence detection
system (Amersham) and subsequent phosphorimager (Bio-Rad) analysis.
Following detection, the amount of 3H-labeled DNA loaded in
each slot was confirmed by scintillation counting.
Western blots.
Extracts were made from equal amounts of
cells following UV irradiation and incubation (see above) as described
previously (36). The cells were washed and concentrated in a
small volume of water. A sample of cells was lysed by freeze-thawing,
and the amount of DNA was determined by fluorometry as described
elsewhere (4). To the remaining cell suspension, an equal
volume of 2× sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) loading buffer (100 mM Tris
[pH 6.8], 200 mM dithiothreitol, 4% SDS, 0.2% bromophenol blue,
20% glycerol) was added, and the mixture was boiled for 5 min. The
resulting extracts were vortexed and centrifuged to pellet DNA. Equal
volumes of extract were loaded onto SDS-7.5% polyacrylamide gels and
electrophoresed, and the proteins were transferred to nitrocellulose
membranes. Known amounts of purified UvrA and UvrB (gift of B. Van
Houten) were run on each gel and used as standards for protein
quantification. Membranes were incubated for 1 h with polyclonal
rabbit antibodies against UvrA (1:32,000 dilution in PBS) or UvrB
(1:16,000 in PBS) followed by incubation in horseradish
peroxidase-conjugated anti-rabbit antibodies (1:10,000 in PBS).
Proteins were detected by enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham), and
their amounts were quantified by phosphorimager analysis and associated
software.
 |
RESULTS |
Inhibition of transcription reduces global repair of CPDs
but not 6-4PPs.
Treatment of EDTA-permeabilized E. coli
with the antibiotic rifampin leads to a rapid cessation of both RNA and
protein syntheses (34). This drug binds irreversibly near
the active center of RNAP, specifically interacting with amino acid
residues in the
subunit. This binding locks the RNAP in an abortive
initiation cycle, preventing transcription elongation (15).
Since transcription-coupled repair requires actively transcribing RNAP,
we expected that rifampin treatment would eliminate all repair
occurring by this subpathway. Wild-type HL108 cells rapidly removed
CPDs from the transcribed strand of the IPTG-induced lactose operon
(Fig. 1A), reaching 50% removal in the
first 5 min after UV treatment. The nontranscribed strand was repaired
more slowly, not reaching 50% repair until 20 min after UV. Treatment
of the same cells with rifampin not only eliminated the strand bias as
we had expected (Fig. 1B) but also dramatically decreased the rate of
repair in both strands to a level significantly below the normal rate
of the nontranscribed strand (compare Fig. 1A with Fig. 1B). Since the
rate of repair of the nontranscribed strand is an indicator of the rate
of global repair, this result suggested that rifampin treatment
inhibited not only transcription-coupled repair but also global repair
of CPDs. This surprising result led us to perform additional
experiments to investigate whether rifampin treatment also affected the
efficiency of repair of both CPDs and 6-4PPs throughout the genome.

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Fig. 1.
Rifampin inhibits transcription-coupled repair and
reduces the efficiency of repair of CPDs in the nontranscribed strand
of the lac operon. Quantitative Southern hybridization of
strand-specific RNA probes to the IPTG-induced lac operon
was performed on DNA isolated from wild-type strain HL108 not treated
(A) or treated with 50 µg of rifampin (RIF) per ml (B). The average
number of CPDs was measured in each strand of the 6.6-kb restriction
fragment in DNA isolated at the indicated times after UV irradiation
with 40 J/m2. Each point represents the average repair
calculated from three independent experiments. , transcribed strand;
, nontranscribed strand.
|
|
We measured the global repair of both CPDs and 6-4PPs in wild-type
cells by using monoclonal antibodies specific for each
lesion.
Untreated cells removed CPDs at an efficient rate, achieving
50%
removal in 20 min and more than 80% after 40 min (Fig.
2A).
This global repair rate of CPDs was
very similar to the kinetics
of nontranscribed strand repair in the
lactose operon (Fig.
1A).
The same cells treated with rifampin
exhibited a significant reduction
in the global repair rate of CPDs
(Fig.
2A). Only 20% of CPDs
were repaired in 20 min, and less than
50% were repaired in 40
min. This result paralleled that obtained from
the lactose operon
of the rifampin-treated cells (Fig.
1B). Thus,
rifampin not only
directly eliminated transcription-coupled repair but,
as shown
by two independent assays, also significantly reduced the rate
of global repair of CPDs. In contrast, removal of 6-4PPs was not
affected by rifampin treatment (Fig.
2B). Both the rifampin-treated
and
untreated cells rapidly removed 6-4PPs from their genome,
reaching 50%
repair within 5 min after UV. No repair of CPDs or
6-4PPs was detected
in an isogenic
uvrA mutant strain (data not
shown).

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Fig. 2.
Rifampin inhibits global repair of CPDs but not 6-4PPs.
Monoclonal antibodies specific for CPDs (A) and 6-4PPs (B) were used in
an immunoassay with DNA isolated at the indicated times after UV
irradiation with 40 J/m2. , HL108 cells; , HL108
cells treated with 50 µg of rifampin per ml. Points represent the
average repair calculated from at least two immunoslot blots of samples
from each of three independent biological experiments. Each error bar
represents 1 standard deviation calculated from the averages of three
independent experiments. Error bars not shown are obscured by the datum
points.
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|
Constitutive expression of the SOS response eliminates rifampin
inhibition of CPD repair.
We hypothesized that the inhibitory
effect of rifampin on global repair of CPDs was due to the drug's
indirect inhibition of protein synthesis. Since the NER recognition
proteins UvrA and UvrB are induced as part of the SOS response
following DNA damage, we reasoned that the inhibition of their
induction by rifampin might account for the less efficient global
repair of CPDs that we observed in treated wild-type cells. To test
whether the presence of induced protein levels prior to UV circumvented the effect of rifampin observed in wild-type cells, we used cells that
constitutively express high levels of SOS-regulated proteins, including
UvrA and UvrB. We analyzed two strains, HL940 and DM1187, in which the
SOS response is constitutively derepressed due to the lack of
functional LexA repressor (20, 32). We found that global
repair of CPDs in DM1187 (and HL940 [data not shown]) occurred more
rapidly than in wild-type cells and was not affected by rifampin (Fig.
3A). Rifampin also had no effect on the
rate of global repair of 6-4PPs in either lexA(Def)
strain (Fig. 3B; HL940 data not shown). These results illustrate that
the factor or factors necessary for efficient global repair of CPDs in
wild-type cells are induced as part of the SOS response following DNA
damage. It also demonstrates that highly efficient repair of both UV
photoproducts can be attained even in the absence of actively
transcribing RNAP.

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Fig. 3.
Constitutive expression of the SOS response results in
rapid repair of CPDs and 6-4PPs and eliminates rifampin inhibition of
genomic CPD repair. Monoclonal antibodies specific for CPDs (A) and
6-4PPs (B) were used in an immunoassay with DNA isolated from DM1187
lexA51(Def) cells at the indicated times after UV
irradiation with 40 J/m2. , untreated cells; , cells
treated with 50 µg of rifampin per ml. Points represent the average
repair calculated from at least two immunoslot blots of samples from
each of two independent biological experiments. Each error bar
represents 1 standard deviation calculated from the averages of two
independent experiments. Error bars not shown are obscured by the datum
points.
|
|
The increase in the rate of global repair of CPDs in cells
constitutively expressing the SOS response is also reflected in
the
rate of repair of CPDs in the nontranscribed strand of the
induced
lactose operon (Fig.
4A). This rate is
not only higher
than that for the normal nontranscribed strand (compare
to Fig.
1A), but it is also indistinguishable from the rate of repair
in the transcribed strand. This result shows that an increase
in the
efficiency of global repair can mask transcription-coupled
repair,
eliminating the ability to detect the normal bias for
the transcribed
strand. In the presence of rifampin, where transcription-coupled
repair
was directly inhibited, repair of both strands was rapid,
with kinetics
similar to those in the untreated cells (Fig.
4B).
Therefore, even in
the absence of any transcription, CPDs in both
strands of the lactose
operon were efficiently repaired.

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Fig. 4.
Constitutive expression of the SOS response leads to
rapid repair of CPDs in both strands of the lactose operon regardless
of rifampin treatment. Transcription-coupled repair assays were
performed on DNA isolated from DM1187 lexA51(Def) cells not
treated (A) or treated with 50 µg of rifampin (RIF) per ml (B). For
experimental details, see Materials and Methods and the legend to Fig.
1. Points represent the average repair calculated from two independent
experiments. , transcribed strand; , nontranscribed strand.
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|
Cells unable to induce the SOS response do not repair CPDs
efficiently.
Because the data shown above suggested that the SOS
response was necessary for efficient global repair of CPDs, we
predicted that mutant cells unable to induce this response would show a lower rate of repair than wild-type cells. E. coli HL942
carries a lexA3(Ind
) mutation and is unable to
induce the SOS response after DNA damage due to the presence of a
noncleavable LexA repressor (32, 45). We found that these
cells did repair CPDs less efficiently than the isogenic
lexA+ cells; also, treatment of
lexA3(Ind
) cells with rifampin yielded an
additional impairment of global repair of CPDs, the resulting rate
being almost exactly the same as that found for rifampin-treated
wild-type cells (compare Fig. 5A to Fig.
2A). Based on the lack of an effect of
rifampin on 6-4PP repair in wild-type cells, we predicted that the
repair of these lesions would also be unaffected by the
lexA3(Ind
) mutation. Indeed, our data showed
the kinetics of global 6-4PP repair in these cells was the same with or
without rifampin treatment (Fig. 5B) and exhibited no difference from
the wild-type rate (Fig. 2B).

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Fig. 5.
Global repair of CPDs, but not 6-4PPs, is attenuated in
cells unable to induce the SOS response. Monoclonal antibodies specific
for CPDs (A) and 6-4PPs (B) were used in an immunoassay with DNA
isolated from HL942 lexA3(Ind ) cells at the
indicated times after UV irradiation with 40 J/m2. ,
untreated cells; , cells treated with 50 µg of rifampin per ml.
Points represent the average repair calculated from at least two
immunoslot blots of samples from three independent biological
experiments. Each error bar represents 1 standard deviation calculated
from the averages of three independent experiments. Error bars not
shown are obscured by the datum points.
|
|
We wanted to test whether elimination of the SOS response also
inhibited transcription-coupled repair of CPDs in the induced
lactose
operon. We found that
lexA3(Ind

) cells did
perform transcription-coupled repair, removing 50%
of the CPDs from
the transcribed strand 5 min after UV (Fig.
6A).
However, the rate of repair of the
nontranscribed strand was as
low as the global repair rate that we
measured by the immunoassay
(compare to Fig.
5A). Rifampin treatment
eliminated the strand
bias, and the repair of CPDs occurred at the low
rate characteristic
of rifampin-treated wild-type cells (Fig.
2A). We
conclude from
these results that induced levels of one or more of the
proteins
of the SOS response is required for efficient removal of CPDs
from nontranscribed regions of the genome but not for repair of
6-4PPs
or for transcription-coupled repair of CPDs.

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Fig. 6.
Cells unable to induce the SOS response perform
transcription-coupled repair of CPDs but exhibit a reduced rate of CPD
repair in the nontranscribed strand in the presence or absence of
rifampin. Transcription-coupled repair assays were performed on DNA
isolated from HL942 lexA3(Ind ) cells not
treated (A) or treated with 50 µg of rifampin (RIF) per ml (B). For
experimental details, see Materials and Methods and the legend to Fig.
1. Points represent the average repair calculated from two independent
experiments. , transcribed strand; and , nontranscribed
strand.
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Uvr protein levels correlate with efficient global repair of
CPDs.
To account for the SOS-dependent variations in global repair
of CPDs, our model predicts that one or both of the NER recognition proteins should be significantly induced in wild-type cells within the
time period that repair was measured. Previous studies of mRNA levels
(24) or
-galactosidase activity of tagged uvrA or uvrB (18, 38) suggested that these are among
the most rapidly derepressed of all genes in the SOS response. We
performed Western blotting on cell extracts from the
lexA+, lexA3(Ind
), and
lexA(Def) strains, using polyclonal antibodies raised
against UvrA and UvrB (Fig. 7 and
8). We measured the rates of induction and relative amounts of these proteins in each genetic background. We
found that lexA+ cells possessed approximately
200 UvrA and 400 UvrB molecules per cell equivalent of DNA (2.1 chromosomes [33]) prior to irradiation. Our Western
blot analyses revealed an induction of both proteins after irradiation
with a 40 J/m2 dose of UV (Fig. 7A and 8A). The time course
of induction was relevant to the repair data, as both UvrA and UvrB
were induced twofold in 10 min and over four- and threefold,
respectively, in 20 min. Within 40 min, over 1,200 UvrA molecules
(sixfold induction) and approximately 2,000 UvrB molecules (fivefold
induction) were present per cell equivalent. By comparison, extracts
from rifampin-treated lexA+ cells showed no
evidence of induction of either protein, and the total number remained
at or slightly below the basal level measured in the untreated cells.
The lexA(Def) strains exhibited a constitutively high level
of both proteins in the presence or absence of rifampin treatment (Fig.
7B and 8B). The agreement between the 1,000 to 2,000 UvrA molecules and
2,000 to 3,000 UvrB molecules per cell equivalent in the
lexA(Def) strains and the levels of these proteins after 40 min of induction in wild-type cells suggests that these NER
proteins reach maximal induction within 40 min after UV
irradiation, coincident with completion of the majority of global
repair of UV photoproducts. As expected, the
lexA3(Ind
) cell extracts showed very
limited induction of both proteins both in the presence and
absence of rifampin treatment (Fig. 7C and 8C). We did find, however,
that untreated lexA3(Ind
) cells showed a
modest accumulation of both UvrA and UvrB and maintained a higher level
of these proteins than the rifampin-treated cells.

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Fig. 7.
Western blot analyses of UvrA protein levels in HL108
lexA+ (A), DM1187 lexA51(Def) (B),
and HL942 lexA3(Ind ) (C) in the presence or
absence of rifampin (RIF). Cultures were sampled prior to UV
irradiation (No UV) and at the indicated times after UV irradiation
with 40 J/m2. Cell extracts were prepared as described in
Materials and Methods. Known amounts of purified UvrA protein were
loaded onto each gel to generate a standard curve for quantitation. The
Western blots shown were generated from phosphorimager scans and
associated Molecular Analyst software. Associated graphs depict the
average levels of UvrA/cell equivalent prior to irradiation and at each
time point as determined from at least three independent experiments.
These levels were calculated by using the UvrA standard curve and by
measuring the amount of DNA in each cell extract to determine
approximate cell number (assuming 2.1 chromosomes/cell). ,
UV-irradiated cells (no rifampin); , UV-irradiated cells treated
with rifampin; , unirradiated cells (no rifampin); , unirradiated
cells treated with rifampin.
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Fig. 8.
Western blot analyses of UvrB protein levels in HL108
lexA+ (A), DM1187 lexA51(Def) (B),
and HL942 lexA3(Ind ) (C) in the presence or
absence of rifampin (RIF). Experiments were performed as described in
the legend to Fig. 7. , UV-irradiated cells (no rifampin); ,
UV-irradiated cells treated with rifampin; , unirradiated cells (no
rifampin); , unirradiated cells treated with rifampin.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Our results demonstrate that the DNA damage-inducible SOS response
plays a role in upregulating NER capacity in E. coli.
The existence of such an upregulation after DNA damage has been
previously postulated for several reasons, including (i) the
demonstration that uvrA, uvrB, and
uvrD were under Rec/Lex control and were induced rapidly
after DNA damage (1, 18, 24, 38); (ii) the dramatic increase
in phage (5, 48) and bacterial (5, 12) survival
if cells were preinduced by low fluences of UV or by genetic means;
(iii) the reduced rate of CPD repair in recA mutants and the
subsequent rapid rate of CPD repair when the SOS response was
derepressed in the same cells (12); and (iv) the decrease in
cell survival when protein synthesis treatments were given immediately
following UV (13, 39, 40).
Our results are consistent with these observations and support the
hypothesis that efficient NER requires upregulation of the
constitutively low level of repair capacity present before UV in
wild-type cells. We used a dose of 40 J/m2, which generates
approximately 4,000 CPDs and 1,000 6-4PPs in the DNA of an E. coli cell containing two chromosomes (3, 30). We found
that uninduced wild-type cells possessed approximately 200 UvrA and 400 UvrB molecules and upregulated these proteins five- to sixfold in the
first 40 min following UV irradiation (Fig. 7 and 8). In the same
period of time, we measured a high rate of global 6-4PP repair and
a lower but efficient rate of global repair of CPDs in these cells
(Fig. 2). The relative rates and extents of global repair that we
measured agree with previous data obtained by using a similar
procedure (19). Treatment of wild-type cells with rifampin
prevented the upregulation of repair proteins (Fig. 7A and 8A) and led
to a significant decrease in the rate of global CPD removal (Fig. 2A)
but had no effect on the repair of 6-4PPs (Fig. 2B). These results are
consistent with the idea that 6-4PPs in the DNA preferentially attract
the limited resources available for repair under these conditions.
Since the 6-4PP is a much better substrate than the CPD for Uvr
proteins (44), the limited number of repair complexes are
targeted to these lesions, which are then rapidly removed from the
genome. Only upon completion of the majority of 6-4PP repair (between 10 and 20 min) is any substantial repair of CPDs observed in the presence of rifampin (compare Fig. 2A and B).
We used two strains carrying different lexA mutations to
test our hypothesis that induced levels of repair enzymes are necessary for efficient CPD removal. Strain DM1187 possesses a
lexA51(Def) allele that causes this strain to express high
levels of SOS-regulated proteins constitutively. These cells possessed
1,000 to 2,000 UvrA and 2,000 to 3,000 UvrB molecules, levels which
were equal to or above those that we measured in wild-type cells 40 min
after UV (compare Fig. 7A and B with Fig. 8A and B). The fact that
these cells not only repaired CPDs rapidly compared to wild-type cells but did so in both the presence and the absence of rifampin (Figure 3)
confirms that the effect of rifampin on global repair of CPDs in
wild-type cells was due to the inability to upregulate repair protein
levels.
Cells with a lexA3(Ind
) mutation are unable to
induce the SOS response and therefore should not be able to upregulate
cellular NER capacity. We found that these cells had a greatly
attenuated induction of both UvrA and UvrB after UV, although they
possessed higher levels of both proteins than did cells treated with
rifampin (Fig. 7C and 8C). In accordance with our hypothesis, the rate of in these cells was significantly lower than that in the isogenic wild-type cells but not as low as that in either cell type treated with
rifampin (Fig. 2 and 5). The higher level of repair proteins in the
untreated cells may allow for slightly more efficient global repair of
CPDs compared to that in the rifampin-treated cells. The
lexA3(Ind
) cells repaired 6-4PPs efficiently
in both the presence and the absence of rifampin (Fig. 3B), confirming
that these lesions are essentially unaffected by the induction level of
the SOS response.
We have confirmed previous results (27, 28) showing rapid
repair of CPDs in the transcribed strand of the induced lac operon of wild-type cells (Fig. 1A). By performing both strand-specific and global repair assays on DNA isolated from cells of differing repair
capacities, we have also been able to verify that the rate of repair of
CPDs in the nontranscribed strand is a consistent, valid estimate of
the rate of global repair of CPDs (19, 27).
We found that the ability to detect transcription-coupled repair is
affected by the extent to which a cell can perform global repair. The
high level of repair proteins present in lexA(Def) cells
eliminated the normal bias of repair to the transcribed strand by
raising the rate of repair of the nontranscribed strand (Fig. 4A). The
lack of an effect of rifampin on repair of either strand (Fig. 4B)
suggests that the transcription-coupled repair of CPDs occurring in
untreated lexA(Def) cells does not make a significant
contribution to the overall removal of CPDs.
The lexA3(Ind
) cells performed
transcription-coupled repair of CPDs (Fig. 6A) but had a reduced
capacity for global repair. The transcription-coupled repair of CPDs
that occurs in these cells may account for the more efficient removal
of these lesions that we observed in the untreated cells relative to
the rifampin-treated cells (Fig. 5A). This finding suggests that cells
unable to induce NER proteins after UV depend on transcription-coupled
repair for a larger fraction of total NER of CPDs.
Transcription-coupled repair may be a critical process in cells with a
limited capacity for global repair because it serves not only to clear
transcription-blocking lesions but also to target NER proteins to
lesions that would otherwise be poorly recognized. The effect of
rifampin on NER of CPDs in wild-type cells may be due to a combination
of the inhibition of SOS induction and the elimination of
transcription-coupled repair.
Parallel evidence from eukaryotic systems suggests that a suboptimal
cellular repair capacity may specifically compromise global repair of
CPDs while having little effect on the rate of transcription-coupled repair of CPDs or the global repair of 6-4PPs. The xeroderma pigmentosum group A revertant XP129 exhibited
normal repair of 6-4PPs and efficient repair of CPDs in the transcribed strand of the dihydrofolate reductase gene but was completely deficient
in the global repair of CPDs (6, 23). Western blots of
extracts from these cells revealed that the level of XP-A protein, the
major NER recognition protein in mammalian cells, was only 30% of
normal (16). In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, leaky
or partial-function mutant alleles of the NER genes rad1,
rad3, and rad14 showed only a small reduction in
the normally high 6-4PP repair rate but exhibited a marked decrease in
the rate of CPD repair (26).
Eukaryotic cells may also depend on damage-induced stress responses for
efficient global repair of CPDs. Studies of UV-irradiated human
fibroblasts homozygous for mutations in the p53 tumor suppressor gene
indicated that a p53-dependent response was necessary for efficient
global repair of CPDs (9, 10). In normal cells, p53 plays a
central role in the cellular responses to DNA damage including cell
cycle checkpoints and apoptosis. It is not clear how p53 is involved in
NER, but part of its role could be to activate, stabilize, or induce
NER proteins. Recent data from other investigators are consistent with
these findings (8, 43). Others have shown that irradiation
of Saccharomyces cerevisiae with a low dose of UV increases
the rate of excision of CPDs from both inactive and active loci
following a subsequent, higher dose (47). This enhancement of repair was eliminated by treatment with a protein synthesis inhibitor during incubation between the two doses, suggesting that
yeast activate or upregulate the levels of repair proteins in response
to DNA damage. The RAD2, RAD7, RAD16,
and RAD23 genes all possess inducible promoters and may play
a role in the proposed inducible response. Interestingly, the RAD7,
RAD16, and RAD23 proteins are involved specifically in the repair of
bulky lesions in nontranscribed regions of the genome (11),
which our data suggest are the main targets for inducible NER in
E. coli.
In conclusion, we have shown that E. coli depends on an
inducible response to upregulate NER capacity and remove the major UV-induced lesion, the CPD, from the genome efficiently. Although other
SOS-dependent proteins may be necessary for efficient global repair,
induction of UvrA and UvrB in wild-type cells is coincident with
efficient repair of CPDs. Basal levels of these enzymes are sufficient
to repair 6-4PPs and to perform transcription-coupled repair of CPDs.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We appreciate the helpful discussions and critical reading of the
manuscript by Ann Ganesan, Justin Courcelle, and C. Allen Smith. We
also thank Ben Van Houten for his generous gift of UvrA and UvrB
proteins and antibodies and Toshio Mori for providing the CPD and 6-4PP
antibodies.
This work was supported by a Cellular and Molecular Biology traineeship
GM07276 and Outstanding Investigator grant CA44349 from the National
Cancer Institute, NIH.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305-5020. Phone: (650) 723-2425. Fax: (650) 725-1848. E-mail:
dcrowley{at}leland.stanford.edu.
 |
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