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Mutagenesis and More: umuDC and the Escherichia coli SOS Response
Bradley T. Smitha and Graham C. Walkeraa Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Corresponding author: Graham C. Walker, Department of Biology, M.I.T., Room 68-633, 77 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02139, gwalker{at}mit.edu (E-mail).
| ABSTRACT |
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The cellular response to DNA damage that has been most extensively studied is the SOS response of Escherichia coli. Analyses of the SOS response have led to new insights into the transcriptional and post-translational regulation of processes that increase cell survival after DNA damage as well as insights into DNA-damage-induced mutagenesis, i.e., SOS mutagenesis. SOS mutagenesis requires the recA and umuDC gene products and has as its mechanistic basis the alteration of DNA polymerase III such that it becomes capable of replicating DNA containing miscoding and noncoding lesions. Ongoing investigations of the mechanisms underlying SOS mutagenesis, as well as recent observations suggesting that the umuDC operon may have a role in the regulation of the E. coli cell cycle after DNA damage has occurred, are discussed.
THE environment contains a multitude of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)-damaging agents ranging from ultraviolet light (U V) to fungal metabolites like Aflatoxin B1. Furthermore, DNA-damaging agents, such as reactive oxygen species, can be produced by the cell itself as metabolic by-products and intermediates. Together, these agents pose a constant threat to an organism's genome. As a result, organisms have evolved many vitally important mechanisms, such as nucleotide excision repair, to deal with DNA damage in an error-free manner. When DNA damage cannot be repaired in an error-free manner, a mutagenic event may occur. Escherichia coli, among other bacteria, has evolved a coordinated response to challenges to the integrity of its genome. This inducible system, termed the SOS response, includes functions, known collectively as the SOS mutagenesis system, that are required for such mutagenic events to occur (reviewed comprehensively in ![]()
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| The SOS response |
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The SOS response, a regulon of over 20 unlinked genes, many of which are involved in DNA-damage tolerance and repair, e.g., recA, lexA, umuDC, polB, recN, sulA, uvrA, uvrB, and uvrD, is induced after the cell encounters DNA-damaging agents. One component of this response is an error-prone damage tolerance mechanism called SOS mutagenesis. This process requires the umuD+C + and recA+ genes and endows the cell with an increased capacity to recover from DNA damage by allowing it to process lesions that cannot be repaired in an error-free manner, e.g., an abasic site opposite a break or a gap in the complementary DNA strand (![]()
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In E. coli, the recA+ (![]()
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The present model for the regulation of the SOS response can be summarized as follows (Figure 2): When ssDNA (the cell's internal signal that it has suffered DNA damage) is present, RecA is converted to RecA*. This pool of RecA* stimulates the cleavage of LexA, resulting in the induction of the SOS response and therefore in the increased synthesis of RecA, which remains in the activated RecA* form as long as the inducing signal persists. Although less is known about what happens when the cell recovers from the DNA damage, the amount of inducing signal is presumed to decrease, causing RecA* to revert to RecA. This results in the reaccumulation of intact LexA, which represses the entire SOS regulon, thereby shutting down the response. Further modulation of the response is provided by the differential affinity of LexA for the promoters of SOS response genes, which allows some genes to be fully induced at a lower level of DNA damage than others (![]()
| SOS mutagenesis |
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The umuD and umuC genes, which form an operon, are required for the process of SOS mutagenesis (Figure 1; ![]()
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DNA sequence analysis of the umuD+C + operon revealed that the UmuD protein shares homology with the carboxyl-terminal domain of LexA, which contains the latent autodigestive activity (![]()
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Because a lexA(Def ) recA(Def ) strain expressing UmuD' and UmuC is not U V-mutable, RecA must play another, perhaps more direct, role in SOS mutagenesis besides its coprotease activity (![]()
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The protein-protein interactions in which UmuD, UmuD', and UmuC proteins participate are varied (Figure 2). Genetic and biochemical evidence exists for the formation of UmuD2 and UmuD'2 homodimers (![]()
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The UmuD' crystal structure has been solved (![]()
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In an independent approach, the structure of the UmuD2 and UmuD'2 homodimers has been probed using a series of engineered functional derivatives of the UmuD or UmuD' protein that contain a single cysteine residue at defined positions in the amino acid sequence. By using oxidizing agents to stimulate disulfide-bond formation and a cysteine-specific homobifunctional cross-linking reagent, inferences have been made about the structures of the two homodimers. Although the presence of the amino-terminal 24 amino acid residues on UmuD compared with UmuD' is an obvious indicator that the structures of the two dimers are different, cross-linking data indicate that there are additional differences in the tertiary structures of the domains common to both proteins (![]()
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The nature of the UmuC protein has remained much more elusive than that of its partners UmuD and UmuD'. The initial purification of an active protein was challenging and required denaturation followed by a gradual refolding in the presence of equimolar amounts of ribosomal S9 protein (![]()
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In vivo, there is a genetic requirement for the groEL+ and groES + genes for SOS mutagenesis, which appears to result from a reduction of the cellular UmuC levels in a groE mutant strain (![]()
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| Molecular mechanism of SOS mutagenesis |
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A general model for SOS mutagenesis proposed by ![]()
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The specific molecular details of umuD+C +-mediated translesion synthesis, the underlying cause of SOS mutagenesis, are still not understood. A number of models have been proposed for the molecular mechanism of this process, including a suppression of a DNA polymerase's proofreading ability, an increase in its processivity, or a relaxation of its requirement for a proper Watson-Crick DNA structure for continued replication (![]()
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, the 3'
5' exonuclease proofreading subunit, is used (![]()
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Overexpression of the umuD+C + operon from a multicopy plasmid in lexA(Def ) cells, which constitutively express the SOS response genes, causes a cold-sensitive growth phenotype at 30°. This umuD+C +-mediated cold sensitivity for growth is accompanied by a rapid, reversible, UmuDC-dependent inhibition of DNA synthesis at the restrictive temperature (![]()
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ECHOLS and his colleagues (![]()
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| Homologs of umuD+C + |
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There are numerous prokaryotic homologs of the umuD+C + operon and multiple eukaryotic umuC + homologs as well (Table 1 and Table 2). A set of highly homologous operons located on bacterial chromosomes or on naturally occurring plasmids has been cloned and sequenced, and one study has indicated that homologous operons may be present in many other bacterial species as well (![]()
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Interestingly, E. coli has another chromosomally encoded umuC + homolog, dinB+, which was initially identified in a screen for loci whose expression is stimulated by DNA damage (![]()
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The mechanism of damage-induced mutagenesis has also been studied in eukaryotic systems, with the best-characterized model system being the yeast S. cerevisiae. The nonessential S. cerevisiae gene R EV1 is required for UV mutagenesis (![]()
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, that can replicate through U V-damaged DNA with limited efficiency (![]()
in vivo. In an intriguing set of experiments in another eukaryotic model system, it was found that the replication arrest of U V-damaged M13 ssDNA molecules in Xenopus oocytes could be relieved by the injection of messenger RNA molecules encoding either UmuD' and UmuC or MucA' and MucB (![]()
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| A role for umuD+C + in cell-cycle regulation |
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Recent experiments performed in our laboratory have shed new light on the functions of the umuD+C + gene products and on how an E. coli cell responds to DNA damage. These findings evolved out of a more detailed analysis of the phenomenon of umuD+C +-mediated cold sensitivity for growth, i.e., cells that constitutively express umuD+C + from a multicopy plasmid can grow at 42° but cannot grow at 30°; MARSH and WALKER 1985. Our results have revealed that cold sensitivity for growth and SOS mutagenesis are genetically separable functions of the umuD+C + gene products (![]()
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These studies also revealed that UmuD and UmuC could inhibit cell division, i.e., inhibit septation via a novel pathway, causing the production of cellular filaments at 30° in lexA(Def ) strains when expressed from the single chromosomal copy of the umuD+C + operon (![]()
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The cold sensitivity for growth, filamentation, and inhibition of DNA replication phenotypes observed when umuD+C + is overexpressed indicated the possibility of a novel function(s) of the umuD+C + operon when expressed at physiologically relevant levels. The first hint of what this function might be was provided by previous work in our laboratory in which an allele of umuC , umuC125, was isolated; when overexpressed with umuD+ on a pBR322-based plasmid, this allele did not cause cold sensitivity for growth even though it was active in SOS mutagenesis. Interestingly, the umuC125 mutation also made the cells more sensitive to U V irradiation than strains expressing umuC + (![]()
The answer to that question is suggested by various clues indicating that the umuD+C + gene products are involved in regulating aspects of the cell cycle after DNA damage. Recent observations indicate that UmuC and the intact UmuD protein are involved in the inhibition of DNA replication after the cell's DNA is damaged. The RecA*-mediated processing of UmuD to UmuD' results in the lifting of this inhibition. It is attractive to view the cleavage of UmuD to UmuD' as a timing mechanism. Once the umuD+C + operon is induced, the gene products will act to inhibit DNA replication, thereby allowing error-free repair of the DNA to occur. If the damage is extremely extensive and cannot be repaired promptly, the DNA damage signal will persist long enough to allow RecA* to promote the cleavage of UmuD to UmuD', stimulating translesion synthesis and allowing the cell to continue its cell cycle as best it can (T. OPPERMAN, S. MURLI and G. C. WALKER, unpublished results). Supporting this model is the fact that the RecA*-mediated cleavage of UmuD is much less efficient than that of other coprotease substrates such as LexA and MucA (![]()
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The process by which UmuD and UmuC influence DNA synthesis after DNA damage is related to the observation that following sublethal doses of U V, DNA replication rates in E. coli decrease and then, shortly afterwards, resume to normal levels. This resumption has been termed "induced replisome reactivation" (IRR; ![]()
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The increased UV sensitivity of mutant strains that completely lack umuD+C + function (![]()
umuDC mutation still increases UV sensitivity (T. OPPERMAN, S. MURLI and G. C. WALKER, unpublished results). This experiment clearly demonstrates a role for the UmuD and UmuC proteins in the protection of the cell from DNA damage, which is distinct from their role in SOS mutagenesis. Further investigation of this additional function revealed that, while the inhibition and recovery of DNA synthesis after U V irradiation occurs normally in a
umuDC strain, increasing the dosage of umuD+C + (but not of umuD'C +) using a pBR322-based plasmid delayed the resumption of DNA synthesis relative to the pBR322-containing,
umuDC control strain. With a plasmid carrying an operon encoding a mutant UmuD molecule that is refractive to RecA*-mediated cleavage [umuD(SA60)C +; NOHMI et al. 1988], recovery of DNA synthesis was not observed within the time scale of the experiment (60 min). In contrast, with the plasmid-borne umuD+C125 operon, which exhibits increased U V sensitivity and does not cause cold sensitivity when overexpressed, inhibition of DNA synthesis did not occur after U V irradiation (T. OPPERMAN, S. MURLI and G. C. WALKER, unpublished results).
Analysis of these data must take into account the previously mentioned work on the inhibition and resumption of DNA synthesis after U V irradiation, which showed the following: (1) a strain unable to induce the SOS response (lexA3) exhibited inhibition of DNA synthesis after U V irradiation but not the subsequent resumption that is seen in a wild-type strain (![]()
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Additional observations indicate that the umuD+C + gene products can act to increase the resistance of stationary-phase cells to DNA damage by inhibiting the transition of the cells from stationary phase to exponential growth. This presumably allows time for the accumulated lesions to be repaired before cells begin rapid DNA synthesis and growth. This growth-phase arrest appears to occur via a umuD+C +-dependent inhibition of an activity of Fis (S. MURLI, T. OPPERMAN and G. C. WALKER, unpublished results), a protein that is maximally expressed in the first two generations after cells emerge from stationary phase and is involved in a variety of processes, including growth-phase and transcriptional regulation as well as site-specific recombination (![]()
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| Evolution of the umu -like operons |
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With evidence accumulating that supports a DNA-damage checkpoint role for the umuD+C + gene products, an entirely new light is cast on the question of the evolution of the umuD+C + operon and its many homologs (Table 1 and Table 2). Previous discussions of the evolution of the umu -like operons focused on the difficulty of rationalizing the apparent selective disadvantage of an inducible mutagenesis system, considering the fact that the vast majority of mutagenic events will be unfavorable, with the widespread occurrence of highly homologous operons in a variety of prokaryotic (and eukaryotic, in the case of R EV1) organisms. Usually, it has been concluded that the translesion synthesis activity that these operons promote provides the cell with an additional means of surviving a serious challenge by DNA-damaging agents, with the resulting mutations being the price of survival (![]()
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Study of the molecular basis of UV and chemical mutagenesis in the model system E. coli has not only provided insights into the process of mutagenesis but also into the regulation of gene expression in response to DNA damage (the SOS response), into a novel mechanism of post-translational regulation (the RecA*-mediated autodigestion of LexA and UmuD), and into the regulation of the cell cycle in response to DNA damage (the role of umuD+C + in filamentation, inhibition of DNA replication, and growth-phase transition). Future investigation into the molecular mechanisms of translesion synthesis and into the roles of RecA, UmuD, UmuD', UmuC, and DNA Pol III in that process will undoubtedly reveal much about the mechanism by which mutations become fixed in an organism's genome. These inquiries may also illuminate more general features of both DNA replication and the cellular response to DNA damage.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The authors thank Dr. TIMOTHY OPPERMAN for his critical reading and discussion of the manuscript. We also thank Drs. ANN FERENTZ, GERHARD WAGNER, KENDALL KNIGHT and HARUO OHMORI for sharing unpublished data. The other members of the Walker laboratory are also acknowledged for their helpful comments and assistance. This work was supported by Public Health Service grant CA-21615, awarded by the National Cancer Institute.
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