Affiliation:
1. Institute of Microbiology, Rutgers University, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08903
Abstract
Twenty-one Mut mutants were obtained from
Escherichia coli
B (B/UV) and K-12 (JC355) after treatment with mutagens. These Mut strains are characterized by rates of mutation to streptomycin resistance and T-phase resistance which are significantly higher than the parental (Mut
+
) rates. Mutator genes in 12 strains have been mapped at three locations on the
E. coli
chromosome: one close to the
leu
locus; five close to the
purA
locus; and six close to
cysC
. In addition, eight mutator strains derived from
E. coli
B/UV are still unmapped. Some effort was made to deduce the mode of action of the mutator genes. These isolates have been examined for possible defects in deoxyribonucleic acid repair mechanisms (dark repair of ultraviolet damage, host-cell reactivation, recombination ability, repair of mitomycin C damage). By using transductional analysis, it was found that the ultraviolet sensitivity of NTG119 and its mutator property results from two separate but closely linked mutations. PurA
+
transductants that receive
mut
from NTG119 or NTG35 are all more sensitive to mitomycin C than is the PurA recipient. Unless transduction selects for sensitivity, a probable interpretation is that defective repair of mitomycin C-induced damage is related to the mode of action of
mut
in these transductants and the donor. Abnormal purine synthesis may be involved in the mutability of some strains with cotransduction of the mutator properly and
purA
(100% cotransduction for NTG119). Three mutators are recombination-deficient and may have a defective step in recombination repair. One maps near three
rec
genes close to
cysC
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
46 articles.
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