Oxidative stress drives mutagenesis through transcription-coupled repair in bacteria

Author:

Carvajal-Garcia Juan1ORCID,Samadpour Ariana N.2ORCID,Hernandez Viera Angel J.1ORCID,Merrikh Houra1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN 37232

2. Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195

Abstract

In bacteria, mutations lead to the evolution of antibiotic resistance, which is one of the main public health problems of the twenty-first century. Therefore, determining which cellular processes most frequently contribute to mutagenesis, especially in cells that have not been exposed to exogenous DNA damage, is critical. Here, we show that endogenous oxidative stress is a key driver of mutagenesis and the subsequent development of antibiotic resistance. This is the case for all classes of antibiotics and highly divergent species tested, including patient-derived strains. We show that the transcription-coupled repair pathway, which uses the nucleotide excision repair proteins (TC-NER), is responsible for endogenous oxidative stress-dependent mutagenesis and subsequent evolution. This suggests that a majority of mutations arise through transcription-associated processes rather than the replication fork. In addition to determining that the NER proteins play a critical role in mutagenesis and evolution, we also identify the DNA polymerases responsible for this process. Our data strongly suggest that cooperation between three different mutagenic DNA polymerases, likely at the last step of TC-NER, is responsible for mutagenesis and evolution. Overall, our work identifies a highly conserved pathway that drives mutagenesis due to endogenous oxidative stress, which has broad implications for all diseases of evolution, including antibiotic resistance development.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Institute of General Medical Sciences

HHS | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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