Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The LexA protein of
Escherichia coli
represses the damage-inducible SOS regulon, which includes genes for repair of DNA. Surprisingly,
lexA
null mutations in
Salmonella enterica
are lethal even with a
sulA
mutation, which corrects
lexA
lethality in
E. coli
. Nine suppressors of lethality isolated in a
sulA
mutant of
S. enterica
had lost the Fels-2 prophage, and seven of these (which grew better) had also lost the Gifsy-1 and Gifsy-2 prophages. All three phage genomes included a homologue of the
tum
gene of coliphage 186, which encodes a LexA-repressed cI antirepressor. The
tum
homologue of Fels-2 was responsible for
lexA
lethality and had a LexA-repressed promoter. This basis of
lexA
lethality was unexpected because the four prophages of
S. enterica
LT2 are not strongly UV inducible and do not sensitize strains to UV killing. In
S. enterica
,
lexA
(Ind
−
) mutants have the same phenotypes as their
E. coli
counterparts. Although
lexA
null mutants express their error-prone DinB polymerase constitutively, they are not mutators in either
S. enterica
or
E. coli
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
59 articles.
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