Mismatch repair protein MutL becomes limiting during stationary-phase mutation
Open Access
- 15 September 1997
- journal article
- Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in Genes & Development
- Vol. 11 (18) , 2426-2437
- https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.11.18.2426
Abstract
Postsynthesis mismatch repair is an important contributor to mutation avoidance and genomic stability in bacteria, yeast, and humans. Regulation of its activity would allow organisms to regulate their ability to evolve. That mismatch repair might be down-regulated in stationary-phase Escherichia coli was suggested by the sequence spectrum of some stationary-phase (“adaptive”) mutations and by the observations that MutS and MutH levels decline during stationary phase. We report that overproduction of MutL inhibits mutation in stationary phase but not during growth. MutS overproduction has no such effect, and MutL overproduction does not prevent stationary-phase decline of either MutS or MutH. These results imply that MutS and MutH decline to levels appropriate for the decreased DNA synthesis in stationary phase, whereas functional MutL is limiting for mismatch repair specifically during stationary phase. Modulation of mutation rate and genetic stability in response to environmental or developmental cues, such as stationary phase and stress, could be important in evolution, development, microbial pathogenicity, and the origins of cancer.Keywords
This publication has 77 references indexed in Scilit:
- Involvement of mouse Mlh1 in DNA mismatch repair and meiotic crossing overNature Genetics, 1996
- GASPing for Life in Stationary PhaseCell, 1996
- Multicopy single‐stranded DNA of Escherichia coli enhances mutation and recombination frequencies by titrating MutS proteinMolecular Microbiology, 1996
- Evidence that F Plasmid Transfer Replication Underlies Apparent Adaptive MutationScience, 1995
- χ AND THE RecBC D ENZYME OF ESCHERICHIA COLIAnnual Review of Genetics, 1994
- In pursuit of a molecular mechanism for adaptive mutationGenome, 1994
- Multicopy single-stranded DNAs with mismatched base pairs are mutagenic in Escherichia coliMolecular Microbiology, 1994
- The split-end model for homologous recombination at double-strand breaks and at ChiBiochimie, 1991
- A unicorn in the gardenNature, 1988
- Mismatch repair and recombination in E. coliCell, 1987