Hypermutation in bacteria and other cellular systems
- 29 January 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 356 (1405) , 29-39
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2000.0745
Abstract
A temporary state of hypermutation can in principle arise through an increase in the rate of polymerase errors (which may or may not be triggered by template damage) and/or through abrogation of fidelity mechanisms such as proofreading and mismatch correction. In bacteria there are numerous examples of transient mutator states, often occurring as a consequence of stress. They may be targeted to certain regions of the DNA, for example by transcription or by recombination. The initial errors are made by various DNA polymerases which vary in their error–proneness: several are inducible and are under the control of the SOS system. There are several structurally related polymerases in mammals that have recently come to light and that have unusual properties, such as the ability to carry out ‘accurate’ translesion synthesis opposite sites of template damage or the possession of exceedingly high misincorporation rates. In bacteria the initial errors may be genuinely spontaneous polymerase errors or they may be triggered by damage to the template strand, for example as a result of attack by active oxidative species such as singlet oxygen. In mammalian cells, hypermutable states persisting for many generations have been shown to be induced by various agents, not all of them DNA damaging agents. A hypermutable state induced by ionizing radiation in male germ cells in the mouse results in a high rate of sequence errors in certain unstable minisatellite loci; the mechanism is unclear but believed to be associated with recombination events.Keywords
This publication has 100 references indexed in Scilit:
- DNA Replication Errors Produced by the Replicative Apparatus of Escherichia coliJournal of Molecular Biology, 1999
- mutY 'directs' mutation?Nature, 1995
- Evidence that F Plasmid Transfer Replication Underlies Apparent Adaptive MutationScience, 1995
- The formation of one-G deletions as a consequence of singlet-oxygen-induced DNA dmageMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1994
- Radiation Induction of Germline Mutation at a Hypervariable Mouse Minisatellite LocusInternational Journal of Radiation Biology, 1994
- Experimental evidence for an alternative to directed mutation in thebgl operonNature, 1992
- Concomitant induction of signal transduction pathways and genetic instability by the tumor promoter 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetateCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1991
- Mutagenesis by proximity to the recA gene of Escherichia coliJournal of Molecular Biology, 1990
- Non-targeted mutagenesis of unirradiated lambda phage in Escherichia coli host cells irradiated with ultraviolet lightJournal of Molecular Biology, 1984
- Biological function for 6-methyladenine residues in the DNA of Escherichia coli K12Journal of Molecular Biology, 1974