Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Homologous recombination is one of the key mechanisms responsible for the repair of DNA double-strand breaks. Recombinational repair normally requires a battery of proteins, each with specific DNA recognition, strand transfer, resolution, or other functions.
Helicobacter pylori
lacks many of the proteins normally involved in the early stage (presynapsis) of recombinational repair, but it has a RecN homologue with an unclear function. A
recN
mutant strain of
H. pylori
was shown to be much more sensitive than its parent to mitomycin C, an agent predominantly causing DNA double-strand breaks. The
recN
strain was unable to survive exposure to either air or acid as well as the parent strain, and air exposure resulted in no viable
recN
cells recovered after 8 h. In oxidative stress conditions (i.e., air exposure), a
recN
strain accumulated significantly more damaged (multiply fragmented) DNA than the parent strain. To assess the DNA recombination abilities of strains, their transformation abilities were compared by separately monitoring transformation using
H. pylori
DNA fragments containing either a site-specific mutation (conferring rifampin resistance) or a large insertion (kanamycin resistance cassette). The transformation frequencies using the two types of DNA donor were 10- and 50-fold lower, respectively, for the
recN
strain than for the wild type, indicating that RecN plays an important role in facilitating DNA recombination. In two separate mouse colonization experiments, the
recN
strain colonized most of the stomachs, but the average number of recovered cells was 10-fold less for the mutant than for the parent strain (a statistically significant difference). Complementation of the
recN
strain by chromosomal insertion of a functional
recN
gene restored both the recombination frequency and mouse colonization ability to the wild-type levels. Thus,
H. pylori
RecN, as a component of DNA recombinational repair, plays a significant role in
H. pylori
survival in vivo.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
35 articles.
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