Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
umuDC
gene products, whose expression is induced by DNA-damaging treatments, have been extensively characterized for their role in SOS mutagenesis. We have recently presented evidence that supports a role for the
umuDC
gene products in the regulation of growth after DNA damage in exponentially growing cells, analogous to a prokaryotic DNA damage checkpoint. Our further characterization of the growth inhibition at 30°C associated with constitutive expression of the
umuDC
gene products from a multicopy plasmid has shown that the
umuDC
gene products specifically inhibit the transition from stationary phase to exponential growth at the restrictive temperature of 30°C and that this is correlated with a rapid inhibition of DNA synthesis. These observations led to the finding that physiologically relevant levels of the
umuDC
gene products, expressed from a single, SOS-regulated chromosomal copy of the operon, modulate the transition to rapid growth in
E. coli
cells that have experienced DNA damage while in stationary phase. This activity of the
umuDC
gene products is correlated with an increase in survival after UV irradiation. In a distinction from SOS mutagenesis, uncleaved UmuD together with UmuC is responsible for this activity. The
umuDC
-dependent increase in resistance in UV-irradiated stationary-phase cells appears to involve, at least in part, counteracting a Fis-dependent activity and thereby regulating the transition to rapid growth in cells that have experienced DNA damage. Thus, the
umuDC
gene products appear to increase DNA damage tolerance at least partially by regulating growth after DNA damage in both exponentially growing and stationary-phase cells.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology