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Journal of Bacteriology, July 2002, p. 3501-3507, Vol. 184, No. 13
0021-9193/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JB.184.13.3501-3507.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139,1 Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts 016052
Received 31 January 2002/ Accepted 10 April 2002
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NO. itself is not very reactive with DNA. However, NO. can react with oxygen and superoxide to create N2O3 and peroxynitrite, potent DNA-damaging agents. N2O3 can deaminate DNA bases to create mutagenic lesions, such as uracil, hypoxanthine, and xanthine. Peroxynitrite is an oxidizing agent, which reacts preferably with guanine. This reaction primarily results in 8-oxoguanine, which is potentially mutagenic, and 8-nitroguanine, which is susceptible to spontaneous depurination (22, 45). Interestingly, 8-oxoguanine is more susceptible to oxidation by peroxynitrite than is guanine, resulting in secondary oxidation products, which are potentially mutagenic and cytotoxic (5). Peroxynitrite has also been shown previously to induce single-strand breaks in plasmid DNA in vitro, most likely through the oxidative breakdown of deoxyribose (15).
The base excision repair (BER) pathway plays a major role in the removal of bases with NO.-induced damage in E. coli (34). DNA glycosylases initiate BER by cleaving the N-glycosylic bond between the base and the deoxyribose, resulting in an abasic (AP) site. Subsequently, AP endonucleases incise the DNA backbone immediately 5' to the AP site, to create a 3'-OH terminus and a 5'-deoxyribose phosphate residue. The 5'-deoxyribose phosphate residue is removed by a deoxyribose phosphodiesterase, while the 3'-OH is extended by DNA polymerase I. Repair is then completed by a DNA ligase (31, 43). DNA glycosylases that can remove oxidative base damage have an associated lyase activity, so that removal of the base is thought to be coupled with nicking of the DNA backbone on the 3' side of the lesion, resulting in a cleaved AP site. While this process eliminates the need for a deoxyribose phosphodiesterase, an AP endonuclease activity is still required to generate the 3'-OH terminus, necessary for DNA synthesis.
Several DNA glycosylases are potentially involved in the removal of NO.-induced lesions in E. coli. Uracil, xanthine, hypoxanthine, and 8-oxoguanine are substrates of the uracil DNA glycosylase (Ung), endonuclease V DNA glycosylase, AlkA 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase (AlkA), and formamidopyrimidine DNA glycosylase (Fpg or MutM), respectively (18, 22, 30, 32). While Ung has been shown previously to protect against NO.-induced mutations, no DNA glycosylase-deficient strains, including the ung mutant, have been found to have enhanced sensitivity to NO. toxicity (34, 37). In contrast, E. coli strains deficient in AP endonuclease activity (double mutant in exonuclease III and endonuclease IV: xth nfo) are very sensitive to NO. toxicity (34). These results suggest that, upon exposure of cells to NO., BER is required to process AP sites that are formed either by DNA glycosylases or by spontaneous base loss.
In addition to AP endonucleases, recombinational repair plays a pivotal role in preventing the genotoxic effects of NO. (34). Homologous recombinational repair processes can be initiated by DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) or single-stranded DNA regions (17). In E. coli, the RecBCD complex processes DSBs (1), while the RecFOR proteins bind single-stranded DNA regions and facilitate resumption of replication (9, 41). To survive NO. toxicity, E. coli is dependent on RecBCD, but not on RecF, which suggests that the requirement for homologous recombination following NO. exposure is not due to lesions that induce single-stranded regions or lesions that inhibit the replication fork but rather to the formation of DSBs (34). As neither NO., N2O3, nor peroxynitrite efficiently creates DSBs by direct reaction with DNA in vitro (4, 37), it is likely that NO. induces other types of damage that are subsequently converted into DSBs by enzymatic processing and/or DNA replication.
DNA damage created by the exposure of cells to NO. consists mostly of base damage (34, 37). Although some single-strand breaks appear immediately after exposure, the majority of single-strand breaks do not appear until hours after NO. exposure (at least in Chinese hamster ovary cells) (37). This delayed appearance suggests that the majority of the single-strand breaks are created enzymatically. We therefore hypothesized that NO.-induced recombination may be stimulated by the action of DNA glycosylases. NO. induces DNA base damage that is removed by DNA glycosylases, thereby protecting the cell against mutations. However, the processing of DNA base damage by DNA glycosylases leads to the creation of AP sites and single-strand breaks. In their turn, AP sites and single-strand breaks may be converted into DSBs, possibly during DNA replication. Such DSBs can induce genetic rearrangements and make the cell dependent on recombinational repair.
In this work, we show that disruption of the DNA glycosylase Ung or Fpg rescues AP endonuclease-deficient E. coli from NO. toxicity. We infer that these two DNA glycosylases are active in the production of AP sites, which are toxic to an AP endonuclease-deficient cell. Furthermore, we show that upon exposure of E. coli to NO. these DNA glycosylases lead to a dependence on RecBCD, indicating DSB repair. While overexpression of DNA glycosylases has been shown previously to sensitize recombinational repair-deficient E. coli (8, 27, 28), here we show that cells with normal expression levels of DNA glycosylases are sensitive to NO.-induced DNA DSBs. The results presented in this work shed light on the effects of DNA glycosylases on the maintenance of genomic stability. While DNA glycosylases may protect against NO.-induced mutations, they simultaneously put cells at risk of genetic rearrangements.
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recBCD::Kan locus (26) was moved into GM7330 to create GM7346, while transduction of this locus into GM7617 and GM7619 resulted in the creation of GM7628 and GM7630, respectively. GM7635, GM7637, and GM7643 were constructed by the transfer of the DNA glycosylase mutant loci BD2314 ung-152::Tn10, CC104 mutM::mini-Tn10, and SM1004 alkA::Tet, respectively, into BW528. The
fpg::Amp locus of KL16 fpg (2) was transferred into GM7617 to create EJ101. Transduction of the KM21
recBCD::Kan locus into EJ101 resulted in EJ103. EJ120 was created by moving the RW82
(umuDC)595::Chl locus (44) into AB1157. Subsequent transduction with the KM21
recBCD::Kan locus resulted in EJ121. The antibiotic markers associated with the gene disruptions were confirmed by growth on the appropriate selection medium (20). Disruptions in
recBCD were confirmed by UV sensitivity, while alkA and xth nfo disruptions were confirmed by sensitivity to methyl methanesulfonate. Transduction of the ung-152::Tn10 locus is 100% linked between Tetr and ung phenotypes when selecting for Tetr recombinants (10). Transduction of ung-152::Tn10 into GM7330 and GM7346 was also confirmed by observing
5-fold-increased mutation frequency on rifampin plates. Transductions of the mutM::mini-Tn10,
fpg::Amp,
(umuDC)595::Chl, and
recBCD::Kan loci were confirmed by PCR (data not shown). Plasmids listed in Table 1 were verified by restriction analysis. The pTr vector was created by deleting
70% of the Ung coding sequence (between two BamHI sites) that had been cloned into a pTrc99A plasmid (42). |
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TABLE 1. E. coli strains and plasmids used
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35 nmol/ml/min. Delivery was confirmed by measuring the concentration of nitrate plus nitrite formed after 2 h or by including a strain of known sensitivity as an internal control (38). After exposure, cells appropriately diluted in M9 salts were plated onto LB plates. Surviving colonies were scored after overnight incubation at 37°C. Strains bearing plasmids were inoculated from a single colony and grown overnight in LB-ampicillin (50 µg/ml) medium. The next day, the presence of the plasmid was confirmed by plasmid isolation (Qiagen miniprep kit) and agarose gel analysis (20). Cultures carrying appropriate vectors were diluted 100-fold into LB-ampicillin medium supplemented with 1 mM isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside to induce expression. Cultures were grown until early log phase, exposed to NO., and analyzed as described above. Recombination assay. Strains derived from GM7330 (GM7617, GM7619, GM7624, GM7346, GM7628, GM7630, EJ101, and EJ103) carry two different nonfunctional alleles of the lac operon, each with a different deletion. A homologous recombination event between the mutant alleles can restore the Lac+ phenotype (16). A quantitative recombination assay has been described previously (34). Briefly, early-log-phase cells were exposed to NO. for 2 h, as described above. After exposure, cells were incubated in M9 salts for 30 min, pelleted, resuspended in M9 salts, appropriately diluted, and plated. LB agar plates were used to determine the number of survivors. Recombinant colonies on lactose plates (M9 salts, 1% lactose, 1 µg of thiamine/ml, and 15 g of agar/liter) were scored after incubation for 3 days at 37°C.
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Here we show that disruption of the ung gene in the AP endonuclease-deficient E. coli strain renders the cells significantly more resistant to the toxic effects of NO. (compare xth nfo and xth nfo ung strain data in Fig. 1A). The rescue of the xth nfo double mutant afforded by disruption of ung suggests that Ung creates a significant portion of the AP sites that make AP endonuclease-deficient cells sensitive to NO.. To confirm that the phenotype of the xth nfo ung triple mutant strain was due specifically to a defect in Ung, we complemented this strain by expressing Ung from an isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside-inducible promoter (see Materials and Methods). Reintroduction of Ung restored the sensitivity of the xth nfo ung triple mutant to NO. toxicity, confirming that Ung is responsible for sensitization of AP endonuclease-deficient cells. As expected, additional expression of Ung did not sensitize wild-type (WT) cells to NO. toxicity (Fig. 1B) (27).
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FIG. 1. Relative NO. sensitivities of E. coli strains with varied levels of expression of BER genes. Percent survival is shown on the y axis in all panels. (A) Survival of WT (x), xth nfo ( ), ung ( ), and xth nfo ung () E. coli strains. (B) Survival of WT cells expressing ung from pTr-Ung ( ), xth nfo E. coli carrying control pTr vector ( ), xth nfo ung E. coli expressing ung from pTr-Ung (), and xth nfo ung E. coli carrying control pTr vector ( ). (C) Survival of WT (x), xth nfo ( ), fpg ( ), and xth nfo fpg ( ) E. coli strains. (D) Survival of WT cells expressing fpg from pSL-Fpg ( ), xth nfo cells carrying control pSL ( ), xth nfo fpg cells expressing fpg from pSL-Fpg ( ), and xth nfo fpg cells carrying control pSL ( ). (E) Relative survival of WT (x), alkA tag ( ), xth nfo ( ), and xth nfo alkA ( ) E. coli strains. Data shown in panels A and C are the averages of three or more experiments. Experiments represented in panels B and D were repeated at least two times. Data shown in panel E are the averages of two or more experiments.
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Remarkably, inactivation of either Ung or Fpg can rescue AP endonuclease-deficient E. coli from the toxic effects of NO.. Apparently, abolishing the activity of just one of these DNA glycosylases is sufficient to prevent BER intermediates from reaching toxic levels in an AP endonuclease-deficient strain. These results imply that the number of AP sites must be above a certain threshold in order to be toxic.
Ung and Fpg convert NO.-induced base damage into substrates for recombinational repair. Upon NO. exposure, Ung and Fpg create BER intermediates (see above). While Fpg can create cleaved AP sites, Ung can create only uncleaved AP sites (although these AP sites are likely to be rapidly converted into single-strand breaks by AP endonucleases). Both AP sites and single-strand breaks can induce recombination, because they block DNA replication and/or can be converted into DSBs when encountered by a replication fork (17, 27). Furthermore, DNA glycosylases can create DSBs by removing damaged bases that are in close proximity on opposite strands of the DNA (3, 35). To survive DSBs, E. coli employs RecBCD, which initiates DSB recombinational repair. Previous studies show that recBCD mutant cells are sensitive to NO. toxicity (Fig. 2) (34). If Ung and Fpg are responsible for creating recombinogenic lesions, inactivating these DNA glycosylases should rescue recBCD mutant cells from NO. toxicity. Inactivation of either Ung or Fpg has little effect on the recBCD mutant cells and, if anything, provides slight protection. However, inactivation of both Ung and Fpg provided protection of recBCD E. coli from NO. toxicity (Fig. 2). These results suggest that, when cells are challenged with NO., Ung and Fpg create BER intermediates that are potentially toxic if they are not repaired via homologous recombination.
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FIG. 2. Relative NO. sensitivities of WT E. coli and strains deficient in recombinational repair and DNA glycosylases. All strains were derived from GM7330. The figure shows survival of WT (x), recBCD ( ), recBCD ung ( ), recBCD fpg (), and recBCD fpg ung ( ) E. coli strains. The data are the averages of at least three independent experiments.
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FIG. 3. Relative NO. sensitivities of WT E. coli and strains deficient in recombinational repair and translesion DNA synthesis. The figure shows survival of WT (x), recBCD ( ), and recBCD umuDC () E. coli strains. The data are the averages of at least three independent experiments.
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FIG. 4. NO.-induced recombination in WT E. coli and strains deficient in DNA glycosylases. All strains are derived from GM7330. Recombination frequencies (Lac+ E. coli per 105 viable cells) were determined for control (open bars) and cells exposed to NO. for 2 h (gray bars). Recombination frequencies at equitoxic doses are shown (survival is between 20 and 40%). The error bars denote 95% confidence intervals. The asterisk indicates that the difference between GM7330 and the fpg ung double mutant is statistically significant (Student's t test).
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In this work we show that Ung and Fpg remove NO.-induced base damage by demonstrating that AP endonuclease-deficient cells can be rescued from NO. toxicity by disruption of ung and fpg. Using a similar approach, Galhardo et al. have shown that, under specific conditions, inactivation of Fpg in an AP endonuclease-deficient strain can partially protect that strain from hydrogen peroxide toxicity (13). Furthermore, in a classic study Taylor and Weiss showed that the nonviable dut xth double mutant strain can be rescued by inactivating Ung (40). The dut xth double mutant strain incorporates large amounts of uracil into the genome, which subsequently is repaired by Ung, leading to an accumulation of repair intermediates and inviability of the strain. Interestingly, our studies show that inactivation of either Ung or Fpg suffices to rescue the AP endonuclease mutant cells from NO. toxicity, which is remarkable since none of the major NO.-induced lesions are thought to be substrates for both Ung and Fpg. However, both Ung and Fpg generate AP sites, and cells have several alternative pathways for tolerating AP sites, including translesion synthesis and recombinational repair (27, 36). Although these alternative defense mechanisms apparently suffice if either Fpg or Ung is inactivated in xth nfo double mutants, the combined activity of both Fpg and Ung in an AP endonuclease-deficient strain can overwhelm these defense mechanisms.
In contrast to disruption of Ung or Fpg, inactivation of the AlkA 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase activity in AP endonuclease-deficient E. coli does not rescue the xth nfo double mutant from NO. toxicity. If anything, the xth nfo alkA strain seems to be slightly more sensitive to NO. than the xth nfo strain. One explanation for this observation lies in a difference in the availability of damage tolerance pathways in WT cells and xth nfo mutant cells. In AP endonuclease-deficient cells, recombinational repair and translesion synthesis are likely to be recruited to process the large numbers of BER intermediates that accumulate. Consequently, in xth nfo mutants exposed to NO., these tolerance pathways may not be available for lesions normally removed by AlkA, and inactivating AlkA can increase the sensitivity of the xth nfo mutant.
Accumulation of AP sites and other BER intermediates makes cells dependent on homologous recombinational repair for survival (27, 36). Several studies have shown that overexpression of a DNA glycosylase leads to the induction of homologous recombination and/or sensitizes DSB-repair-deficient strains to the effects of BER intermediates (8, 27, 28). Furthermore, the alkylation sensitivity of an Schizosaccharomyces pombe strain deficient in recombinational repair could be partially relieved by inactivation of its 3-methyladenine DNA glycosylase, which suggests that BER intermediates are fed into the recombinational repair pathway in this species (21). Here, we show that recBCD mutant E. coli, deficient in the repair of DSBs, can be partially rescued from NO. toxicity by inactivating Ung and Fpg, which demonstrates that a significant number of NO.-induced DSBs are created by DNA glycosylases. A similar consequence of DNA glycosylase activity has been reported by Blaisdell and Wallace, who have shown that inactivation of Fpg can protect E. coli from radiation damage by decreasing the amount of radiation-induced DSBs (3). Consistent with the result that recBCD mutant cells can be significantly protected from NO. toxicity by inactivation of Ung and Fpg, we find that inactivation of these same DNA glycosylases suppresses NO.-induced homologous recombination. Our results imply that, in WT cells, Ung and Fpg are responsible for the promotion of a significant portion of NO.-induced recombination events (Fig. 4).
Ung and Fpg do not create DSB substrates but create uncleaved and cleaved AP sites, respectively. However, both kinds of AP sites can be converted into DSBs (uncleaved AP sites may stall the replication fork, and cleaved AP sites may directly cause fork collapse [17]). In the case of exposure of E. coli to NO., uncleaved AP sites do not seem to play a role in the induction of recombination, since inactivation of umuDC, which can suppress the toxicity of uncleaved AP sites, did not further sensitize a recBCD mutant strain to NO. toxicity. Although Ung is actively creating uncleaved AP sites upon NO. exposure, these may be rapidly converted into single-strand breaks by the action of AP endonucleases. Alternatively, uncleaved AP sites may be less easily converted into substrates for recombination than cleaved AP sites or may be far less abundant when the cell processes NO. damage.
The studies presented here show that NO.-induced recombination is promoted by DNA glycosylases. In the case of Ung and Fpg, the lesions normally repaired by these enzymes (which are likely to include uracil and 8-oxoguanine, respectively) are potentially mutagenic, but they are not thought to inhibit DNA replication. We observed that cells deficient in Ung or Fpg have increased susceptibility to NO.-induced mutations (data not shown; for Ung, see also the work of Tamir et al. [37]). However, inactivation of Ung and Fpg also resulted in a decrease in recombination frequency (Fig. 4). Thus, leaving NO.-induced base damage in the genome puts cells at risk of mutations, while removing these lesions can put cells at risk of genetic rearrangements (Fig. 5). It is noteworthy that, in these studies, cells were exposed to levels of NO. that approximate conditions of inflammation (38). Furthermore, in contrast to many other studies, DNA glycosylases are expressed at normal levels. Thus, these studies demonstrate that, under conditions where cells are exposed to physiologically relevant levels of NO., DNA glycosylases, expressed under their endogenous promoters, can create high-enough levels of repair intermediates to put cells at risk of genetic rearrangements. These findings shed light on the effects of exposure of bacteria to macrophages during inflammation and also provide a framework for the study of the relationship between inflammation and genetic stability in mammalian cells.
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FIG. 5. Model for the promotion of genetic changes upon exposure of cells to NO.. Genetic changes can be avoided by successful repair of base damage by BER enzymes. However, NO.-induced base damage can lead to mutations if encountered by the replication fork prior to BER. Recombinational repair is required when repair intermediates are converted into DSBs, possibly during DNA replication.
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We thank Leona Samson, Steven Tannenbaum, and Gerald Wogan for valuable discussions and comments on the manuscript. The help of Teresa Wright and Joe Glogowski is gratefully acknowledged. We thank S. Boiteux, B. Duncan, J. Laval, J. Miller, K. Murphy, L. Samson, J. van de Sande, M. Volkert, G. Walker, S. Wallace, and B. Weiss for strains and plasmids listed in Table 1.
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T transversions. J. Bacteriol. 181:6396-6402.
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