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Genetics, Vol. 148, 1453-1459, April 1998, Copyright © 1998

Adaptive Mutation: Has the Unicorn Landed?

Patricia L. Fostera
a Department of Environmental Health, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02118-2394

Corresponding author: Patricia L. Foster, S107, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston University School of Medicine, 715 Albany St., Boston, MA 02118-2394, pfoster{at}bu.edu (E-mail).


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Reversion of an episomal Lac- allele during lactose selection has been studied as a model for adaptive mutation. Although recent results show that the mutations that arise during selection are not "adaptive" in the original sense, the mutagenic mechanism that produces these mutations may nonetheless be of evolutionary significance. In addition, a transient mutational state induced in a subpopulation of starving cells could provide a species with a mechanism for adaptive evolution.

"Adaptive mutation is a strategy, not a mechanism." JAN DRAKE (1991, personal communication)


IN 1988, JOHN CAIRNS and his collaborators published an article entitled "The Origin of Mutants" (CAIRNS et al. 1988 Down) that has changed our thinking about how spontaneous mutations arise. Drawing upon their own and others' results, they argued that mutations arise in nondividing bacterial cells subjected to nonlethal selective pressure. Additional evidence suggested that only selected mutations, not deleterious or neutral mutations, appeared in a population during selection. Obviously, this phenomenon would have profound implications for evolution and for carcinogenesis. In 1989, CAIRNS and I began a collaboration to further study the phenomenon, which was dubbed "directed mutation" by the editors of Nature and "a unicorn in the garden" by STAHL 1988 Down.

Early in the project, we established that the mutational process was not "directed" toward specific targets (i.e., there was no reverse information flow) (FOSTER and CAIRNS 1992 Down), and we renamed the phenomenon "adaptive mutation" (FOSTER 1993 Down). We then pursued the alternative hypothesis that during selection a random mutational process affecting the whole genome might occur; the process would be adaptive if the variants (or the cells bearing them) were transient unless or until a variant arose that allowed the cell to grow (CAIRNS et al. 1988 Down; STAHL 1988 Down; BOE 1990 Down; HALL 1990 Down). Although less efficient than a directed mechanism, "trial and error" would have equivalent implications. With such a mechanism, a population could increase its genetic variability under stress yet maintain its genes more or less intact.

In the intervening years, many examples of mutation in nondividing cells have been published (reviewed in FOSTER 1993 Down; also see TADDEI et al. 1995 Down; BRIDGES 1996 Down; GALITSKI and ROTH 1996 Down; HALL 1997 Down; KASAK et al. 1997 Down; REDDY and GOWRISHANKAR 1997 Down). Not all are examples of adaptive mutation. In some cases, it has been shown that the mutations can also arise in the absence of selection (e.g., when the cells are merely starving) (MITTLER and LENSKI 1990 Down; MITTLER and LENSKI 1992 Down; FOSTER and CAIRNS 1994 Down; MAENHAUT-MICHEL and SHAPIRO 1994 Down; SNIEGOWSKI 1995 Down). In the case of one of the best-studied examples of adaptive mutation, reversion to lactose utilization (Lac+) in Escherichia coli strain FC40, we now know that nonselected mutations also arise in the Lac- population during lactose selection (FOSTER 1997 Down). However, among selected Lac+ clones the frequency of nonselected mutations appears to be higher than among the population at large (FOSTER 1997 Down; TORKELSON et al. 1997 Down). These results imply that in a population of stressed cells, a subpopulation undergoes some form of transient mutation, as originally suggested by HALL 1990 Down. However, contrary to HALL's hypothesis, the cells bearing nonselected mutations do not necessarily disappear (FOSTER 1997 Down). Nonetheless, this mechanism would provide a population with the means to evolve adaptively when confronted with adverse conditions.

CAIRNS has contributed to this issue a history of adaptive mutation and a discussion of its relevance for carcinogenesis (CAIRNS 1998 Down). Here, I focus on the mechanism of adaptive mutation in FC40 and its relevance for evolution. This particular mechanism does not necessarily underlie other cases of adaptive mutation (see the references cited in the previous paragraph for examples of other mechanisms). As JAN DRAKE perceived (quoted above), the phenomenon we observe as "adaptive mutation" is a strategy to overcome adversity, and cells may have diverse ways of achieving this goal.

Because nonselected mutations arise and persist in the population during selection, a stress-associated general mutational state, strictly speaking, does not meet the original definition of adaptive mutation. However, here I will continue to call the selected mutations "adaptive" to distinguish them from mutations occurring during nonselective growth and from nonselected mutations occurring during selection. This meaning of "adaptive mutation" is the same as that used by evolutionists to distinguish beneficial from neutral or deleterious mutations.


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To study adaptive mutation, CAIRNS and I chose a strain of Escherichia coli that cannot utilize lactose (Lac-) because of a +1 base pair (bp) frameshift mutation affecting the lacZ gene (CALOS and MILLER 1981 Down; MILLER 1985 Down). For ease of genetic manipulation, the Lac- allele is carried on an F' episome, which turned out to be crucial to the mutagenic mechanism. This strain, FC40, readily reverts to lactose utilization (Lac+) when lactose is its sole energy and carbon source (CAIRNS and FOSTER 1991 Down). Because of FC40's vigorous mutational response (about one Lac+ revertant per 107 cells per day), it was possible to eliminate many trivial explanations for the results (such as growth during lactose selection) and to explore the mechanism by which mutations arise in the nondividing cells.

In FC40, the mechanism of mutation to Lac+ during lactose selection is different from the mechanism of mutation to Lac+ during nonselective growth: (1) The spectrum of Lac+ mutations that arise during lactose selection is distinct. Although a variety of deletions, duplications, and frameshifts revert the Lac- allele during growth, adaptive Lac+ mutations consist almost exclusively of -1-bp frameshifts in runs of iterated bases (FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1994 Down; ROSENBERG et al. 1994 Down). (2) Adaptive, but not growth-dependent, reversion to Lac+ requires recombination functions, specifically the activities of the recA-recBCD pathway (CAIRNS and FOSTER 1991 Down; FOSTER 1993 Down; HARRIS et al. 1994 Down). (3) But certain recombination functions have different roles in adaptive mutation than they do in normal recombination. E. coli's two enzyme systems for the branch migration of recombination intermediates, RuvAB and RecG, both contribute to normal recombination (WEST 1996 Down), but RuvAB promotes and RecG opposes adaptive Lac+ mutation (FOSTER et al. 1996 Down; HARRIS et al. 1996 Down). (4) The high level of adaptive reversion to Lac+ in FC40 requires that the Lac- allele be on the episome; if the same allele is at its normal position on the chromosome, adaptive reversion to Lac+ falls about 100-fold and is no longer recA-dependent (FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1995A Down; RADICELLA et al. 1995 Down). In addition, the high rate of adaptive Lac+ mutation on the episome requires that one or more conjugal functions be expressed (FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1995A Down; GALITSKI and ROTH 1995 Down); however, actual conjugation is not required (FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1995A Down, FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1995B Down).

In two respects, the adaptive Lac+ mutations are similar to normal growth-dependent mutations: (1) Adaptive Lac+ mutations are produced by DNA polymerase III, E. coli's replicative polymerase (FOSTER et al. 1995 Down; HARRIS et al. 1997A Down). DNA polymerase II also replicates DNA, particularly in stationary-phase cells, but it produces few errors (ESCARCELLER et al. 1994 Down; FOSTER et al. 1995 Down; RANGARAJAN et al. 1997 Down). (2) The methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR) pathway, which corrects mismatches in hemi-methylated DNA in favor of the methylated strand (MODRICH and LAHUE 1996 Down), corrects about 99% of the errors that could lead to adaptive Lac+ mutations (FOSTER and CAIRNS 1992 Down; FOSTER et al. 1996 Down; HARRIS et al. 1997A Down). The residual mutation rate can be reduced two- to fivefold by overproducing components of the MMR pathway (FOSTER et al. 1995 Down; FOSTER et al. 1996 Down; HARRIS et al. 1997B Down).


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Nicking at the conjugal origin oriT is known to initiate recombination (CARTER et al. 1992 Down); thus, the initiating event for adaptive mutation to Lac+ in FC40 is likely to be a nick at oriT. Previous studies have indicated that conjugation can be mutagenic (KUNZ and GLICKMAN 1983 Down; CHRISTENSEN et al. 1985 Down), and it is possible that conjugal replication initiated by nicking produces the Lac+ mutations (FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1995A Down; GALITSKI and ROTH 1995 Down; RADICELLA et al. 1995 Down). However, the involvement of RecBCD implicates a double-strand break (DSB), the loading point for this enzyme (KOWALCZYKOWSKI et al. 1994 Down), and it is not obvious how a DSB would be created during conjugal replication. In addition, the unusual effects of the branch migration enzymes suggest that the recombination functions have special roles in adaptive mutation to Lac+.

KUZMINOV 1995 Down proposed that the DSB is created when a replication fork initiated at one of the episome's vegetative origins collapses at the nick at oriT (Figure 1, A–C). The exonuclease and helicase activities of RecBCD then create an invasive 3' end that initiates recombination (Figure 1D). After both strands have invaded homologous duplex DNA (of the same or another episome), the replication fork is restored and replication resumes (Figure 2A). Replication errors produced at this point are in hemi-methylated DNA and are correctable by MMR (Figure 2B). But the new fork differs from a normal fork in that it is accompanied by a four-stranded recombination intermediate (a Holliday junction). Migration of the Holliday junction toward the fork creates a tract of doubly unmethylated DNA in which polymerase errors will be randomly repaired by MMR. This tract will thus contain a higher-than-normal number of mutations (Figure 2C and Figure D, left). Migration of the junction away from the fork (Figure 2C and Figure D, right) or resolution of the Holliday junction before DNA synthesis begins (Figure 3) preserves the hemi-methylated state of the DNA, allowing polymerase errors to be correctly repaired.



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Figure 1. —Initiation of double-strand end invasion by collapse of the replication fork at oriT. A star marks the 3' end of the counterclockwise moving fork. TraI is indicated by a flag. Reprinted from FOSTER et al. 1996 Down.



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Figure 2. —Re-establishment of the replication fork and translocation of the Holliday junction in opposite directions by RuvAB and RecG. Newly synthesized DNA is indicated by open lines, and template DNA by closed lines. The 3' end is the lower strand in each case. Reprinted from FOSTER et al. 1996 Down.



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Figure 3. —Removal of the Holliday junction by RecG and subsequent re-establishment of the replication fork. The 3' end is the lower strand in each case. Reprinted from FOSTER et al. 1996 Down.

The opposite effects of the branch migration enzymes on adaptive mutation to Lac+ are accommodated by assuming that RuvAB and RecG promote migration of the Holliday junction away from and toward the replication fork, respectively (Figure 2), or that RecG resolves the Holliday junction before replication resumes (Figure 3) (FOSTER et al. 1996 Down). Both possibilities are consistent with biochemical evidence showing that RuvAB and RecG have different interactions with recombination intermediates (WHITBY et al. 1993 Down; WHITBY and LLOYD 1995 Down).

Several other models are possible (FOSTER et al. 1996 Down; HARRIS et al. 1996 Down), but this one is the most parsimonious. The model also accounts for the fact that whereas MMR is active in nutritionally deprived cells, the mutational spectrum bears the mark of MMR deficiency (see below).


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The recA-dependent mechanism in FC40 is just one of the ways by which mutations could arise in nondividing cells. In nondividing or slowly dividing cells, the mutability of a gene may depend critically on its proximity to a site where DNA synthesis is active. Thus, what is special about the episome may be simply the frequency and persistence of the nick at oriT. But similar events could occur on the chromosome. Spontaneous or damage-induced nicks in the chromosomal DNA will likewise lead to a collapsed replication fork, triggering a recA-recBCD-dependent recombination event that establishes a new replication fork (KUZMINOV 1995 Down). If the subsequent synthesis is error-prone or poorly corrected, or if the recombination is iterative, genes near a frequent nick site will accumulate mutations. Independently of a moving replication fork, DSBs themselves could initiate DNA synthesis by the same recombinational mechanism if a homologue is present. DSBs could occur by breakage of the other strand at a nick or by DNA damage. In addition, at certain sites in the chromosome, called oriM 's, frequent (possibly enzymatically induced) DSBs have been proposed to initiate recA-dependent "stable" DNA-replication (SDR) (KOGOMA 1997 Down). (The relationship between DSB repair, SDR, and adaptive mutation is complicated by their different genetic requirements, but all three appear to involve the same recombination events leading to DNA synthesis.) At other sites on the chromosome, called oriK 's, another form of SDR is initiated by transcription in RNaseH mutants (KOGOMA 1997 Down). Thus, if RNaseH levels are low or inhibited in nutritionally deprived cells, oriK 's would be active.


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We inferred that mutation to Lac+ in FC40 was adaptive because Lac+ mutations did not arise when cells were starved in the absence of lactose (CAIRNS and FOSTER 1991 Down). In addition, nonselected mutations giving a Rif R phenotype (mutations in the chromosomal gene rpoB) did not appear in the Lac- population during lactose selection (FOSTER 1994 Down). As mentioned above, the Lac- allele in FC40 is carried on an F' episome, which raised the possibility that the mutational process was confined to the episome. If chromosomal loci were not involved, this would give the appearance that the mutations were adaptive (FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1995A Down; GALITSKI and ROTH 1995 Down; RADICELLA et al. 1995 Down). This hypothesis was tested with tetracycline-sensitive (TetS) Tn10 elements close to the lac operon on the episome. The two mutants characterized carried +1-bp frameshifts in runs of G:C bps in tetA, and thus were very similar to the Lac- allele. In contrast to the chromosomal rpoB gene, the mutant tetA alleles readily reverted to TetR when the cells were under selection to become Lac+. The TetR mutations accumulated at nearly the same rate and occurred by the same recA-dependent mechanism as the Lac+ mutations (FOSTER 1997 Down). That the TetR mutations appeared and persisted in the Lac- population disproved the hypotheses that nonselected mutations are necessarily transitory or that the cells (or episomes) bearing them are necessarily eliminated from the population. Because neither Lac+ nor TetR mutations arose if lactose was not present (i.e., when the cells were merely starving), the role of lactose is apparently to provide enough energy (because the Lac- allele is "leaky") for DNA replication and recombination even though the cells are not actively dividing. (For other examples of adaptive reversion of "leaky" alleles, see JAYARAMAN 1995 Down; GALITSKI and ROTH 1996 Down.)

Lac+ TetR double mutants also arose in the Lac- TetS population at a frequency about 50-fold higher than would be predicted from the individual mutation rates to Lac+ and TetR (FOSTER 1997 Down). TORKELSON et al. 1997 Down also found that Lac+ revertants of FC40 carried second, nonselected mutations at several additional loci on the episome, on a plasmid, and on the chromosome. Thus, the mutational process is not confined to the episome. Again, the frequency of nonselected mutations among Lac+ clones was 50-fold or more higher than in the Lac- population. However, in contrast to the episomal Lac+ and TetR mutations (FOSTER 1997 Down), there is no evidence published to date that these other nonselected mutations are produced by the same mechanism as the Lac+ mutations. But, because the two classes of mutation preferentially appear in the same cells, there must be some rate-limiting process affecting both selected and nonselected mutations.


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In two previous studies, a higher-than-expected frequency of nonselected mutations had been found among selected clones (BOE 1990 Down; HALL 1990 Down). This result is a specific prediction of the "hypermutable state model" (HALL 1990 Down), although it is also implicitly predicted by all the "trial and error" models for adaptive mutation [because when a cell starts growing, the genetic variant that allowed it to grow will necessarily be retained, but other variants present in the cell at that moment will also have some probability of being preserved (FOSTER 1992 Down)]. But the frequencies at which double mutants were found in these various studies, if accurate, compel a mutating minority. To account for the occurrence and persistence of nonselected mutations in the population at large, HALL's model can be modified as follows: In a starving or otherwise stressed population, a small proportion of the cells enter into a state of increased mutation. It is not known what triggers this state, but because Lac+ mutations accumulate at a constant rate (CAIRNS and FOSTER 1991 Down; FOSTER 1994 Down), the number of mutating cells must be constant with time. These cells give rise to mutants at random, but the rates at which different loci are mutated differ. Differential mutability may be due to position (genes on the episome may be readily mutated because of their proximity to a site of frequent recombination) and the nature of the target (frameshifts may occur more frequently than base substitutions). However, cells carrying a selected mutation (e.g., the Lac+ cells) will be far more likely to carry second, nonselected mutations than cells without the selected mutation (the Lac- cells). This is because the mutating minority is generating Lac+ mutants at a higher rate than the nonmutating majority, and the Lac+ mutant population will be enriched for the cells that have passed through a period of mutation.

This hypothesis, also discussed by BRIDGES 1997 Down, is supported by results from MILLER's laboratory (MAO et al. 1997 Down), demonstrating the ease at which heritable mutators can be enriched in a selected population. Heritable mutators appear to be only minor contributors to the double mutant population in the experiments discussed above (TORKELSON et al. 1997 Down), implying that the state of mutation is usually transient. Thus, a population under stress could temporarily increase its mutation rate in a minority, increasing the chance that a lucky variant will arise, but the majority of cells would remain unchanged in the event a mutation was not needed (CAIRNS 1998 Down).


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CAIRNS 1998 Down has discussed the possibility that the mutating minority may consist of cells that have sustained a transcriptional or translational error leading to a faulty DNA polymerase or DNA repair enzyme (NINIO 1991 Down; BOE 1992 Down; CAIRNS 1998 Down). Here are two additional possibilities: the down-regulation of an error-correcting pathway or the up-regulation of an error-producing pathway.

The spectrum of adaptive mutations in FC40 is typical of polymerase errors that are not corrected by MMR (FOSTER and TRIMARCHI 1994 Down; ROSENBERG et al. 1994 Down). This fact immediately suggested that the mutations occur because MMR levels decline in starving cells, as originally suggested by STAHL 1988 Down. But does MMR decline? Biochemical evidence indicated that the levels of two MMR proteins, MutH and (particularly) MutS, drop sharply in starving cells (FENG et al. 1996 Down). But genetic evidence indicated otherwise—defects in MMR dramatically increase adaptive mutation in FC40 and other strains, showing that MMR is active in nutritionally deprived cells (BOE 1990 Down; FOSTER and CAIRNS 1992 Down; JAYARAMAN 1992 Down; HARRIS et al. 1997A Down; REDDY and GOWRISHANKAR 1997 Down). This apparent contradiction has been resolved by new biochemical data showing that the decline in MMR proteins is considerably less than previously reported (HARRIS et al. 1997B Down). Thus, if a reduction of MMR is responsible for transient mutation, only a subpopulation of cells are affected. Consistent with this idea, overproduction of MMR proteins reduces adaptive mutation in FC40 two- to fivefold (FOSTER et al. 1995 Down; FOSTER et al. 1996 Down; HARRIS et al. 1997B Down). However, MMR proteins in excess may have pathological consequences, for example, by inhibiting the branch migration that is required for recombination (FOSTER et al. 1996 Down; MODRICH and LAHUE 1996 Down; ZAHRT and MALOY 1997 Down). Nonetheless, a role for MMR in adaptive mutation is appealing and is supported by recent evidence that certain MutS-defective tumor cells become mutators only when grown to high densities (RICHARDS et al. 1997 Down).

An alternative hypothesis can account for all the results in FC40. As mentioned above, with the exception of Lac+ and TetR mutations on the episome (FOSTER 1997 Down), there is no evidence published to date that the selected and nonselected mutations are produced by the same mechanism, but only that some rate-limiting process affects them both. Although adaptive Lac+ mutations do not require SOS-induced error-prone DNA synthesis, they do require certain genes, such as recA and ruvAB (CAIRNS and FOSTER 1991 Down; FOSTER et al. 1996 Down), that are repressed by LexA, the SOS repressor (FRIEDBERG et al. 1995 Down). The SOS response is induced in old colonies (TADDEI et al. 1995 Down), and recombination is stimulated by the presence of F' factors (SYVANEN et al. 1986 Down). About 0.1% of the cells in a stationary-phase culture of FC40 are filaments (W. A. ROSCHE and P. L. FOSTER, unpublished results), a phenotype of LexA-derepression. If Lac+ mutants are drawn preferentially from the pool of SOS-induced cells because these cells have induced levels of RecA and RuvAB, Lac+ clones could carry nonselected mutations that result not only from a recA-dependent mechanism but also from SOS-dependent error-prone repair.

Which, if any, of these hypotheses is correct remains to be seen. At the outset of our studies we naïvely assumed that a universal mechanism would underlie adaptive mutation. But genetics proved us wrong as it became apparent that many cases of adaptive mutation do not involve the recA-dependent mechanism that is active in FC40. Now it is tempting to consider transient mutation to be the unique "cause" of adaptive mutation. However, this idea will also probably turn out to be naïve. Transient mutation, if it is real, may itself be due to many causes. So at this juncture it would be wise to again recall JAN DRAKE's comment that is quoted at the start of this article.


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The research reviewed here has several implications for evolution. First, a recombination-dependent mechanism could be an important source of spontaneous mutations in E. coli and other organisms. Recombination events are often accompanied by tracts of DNA synthesis; if these are associated with a high probability of mutations, as indicated by previous studies (DEMEREC 1963 Down; STRATHERN et al. 1995 Down), then recombination can increase variation not only by rearranging existing alleles but also by creating new ones. Second, the recA-dependent mutagenic mechanism is highly active on the F episome. Conjugal plasmids are common among natural isolates of bacteria (CLEWELL 1993 Down). On an evolutionary time scale, F and related plasmids frequently recombine and are passed among the major groups of E. coli and Salmonella enterica (BOYD et al. 1996 Down; BOYD and HARTL 1997 Down). Because F can recombine with the bacterial chromosome, it can pick up and transfer chromosomal genes (HOLLOWAY and LOW 1996 Down), which would then be exposed to the episomal mutation rate and be free to diverge from their chromosomal copies. Thus, the mutational mechanism on the episome may be important in the evolution of species that carry and exchange conjugal plasmids. Third, as discussed above, if nutritionally deprived cells enter into a state of transient mutation, this could provide a mechanism for adaptive evolution under adverse conditions.


*  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

JAN DRAKE has been a constant source of support and encouragement throughout my career, for which I am enormously grateful. I am also grateful to JAN and PAM DRAKE for their years of devotion to this journal. I thank the past and present members of my laboratory who have worked on this project and JOHN CAIRNS for unstinting enthusiasm, ideas and discussion. Work in my laboratory was supported by grant MCB-9214137 from the U.S. National Science Foundation.


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*ABSTRACT
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