Utilisateur
Repair associated with replication, dark repair (NER + recombination repair), and the SOS repair system.
They repair many types of DNA damage and recognize distortions in DNA structure caused by improper base pairing.
Recognition of helix distortion, excision via 3′→5′ exonuclease, and correction by reinserting the correct nucleotide.
Proofreading can be part of the polymerase enzyme itself or performed by a separate accessory protein.
Pol I (repair polymerase with proofreading built-in) and Pol III (replication polymerase; its proofreading depends on DnaQ/mutD subunit).
They lack 3′→5′ exonuclease activity and therefore show dramatically increased spontaneous mutation rates.
Mismatches, frameshifts, base analog incorporation, and minor distortions from alkylation.
Proofreading occurs at the replication fork, while mismatch repair occurs after replication, scanning hemi-methylated DNA.
Dam methylase methylates the parental strand first, leaving the daughter strand unmethylated, allowing the system to know which strand to repair.
MutS binds mismatch
MutL + MutH join
DNA slides to a hemimethylated GATC
MutH cuts unmethylated daughter strand
Exonuclease + UvrD remove DNA past mismatch
Pol III + ligase resynthesize and seal the gap
Mutations in these genes yield non-additive effects and were identified as mutator mutants in the same genetic screens.
Progeny phage always exhibit the dam⁺ parent phenotype and mismatches in hemimethylated DNA are corrected toward the methylated strand template.
DNA is not methylated, so MMR cannot pick the correct strand
The repair system cuts both strands at nearby AP sites
This produces lethal double-strand breaks
Photoreactivation (light-dependent) and dark repair (light-independent); later shown to involve multiple pathways like NER and recombinational repair.
UV-irradiated cells kept in non-nutrient buffer survive better later, showing light-independent repair processes operate even in phr⁻ mutants.
Major helix distortions, such as pyrimidine dimers or bulky adducts.
UvrA₂ = DNA damage scanning
UvrB = binds lesion and cuts 3′ side
UvrC = cuts 5′ side
UvrD = helicase that removes the damaged oligo
UvrA₂–UvrB scan DNA
Lesion recognized
UvrA leaves, UvrC binds
UvrB cuts 4–5 nt 3′
UvrC cuts 7–8 nt 5′
UvrD removes fragment
Pol I + ligase fill and seal
It allows replication to continue past unrepaired damage, leaving a gap that will be fixed later by recombination.
RecA binds ssDNA at the gap
Promotes strand invasion of sister duplex
DNA Pol III fills the gap using the healthy strand as template
Pol III stalls at the dimer
Replication restarts downstream using a new primer, leaving a single-stranded gap
RuvABC complex resolves the Holliday junctions and restores two double-stranded molecules.
Requires high DNA damage, produces error-prone repair, and increases survival by bypassing lesions.
DNA damage produces ssDNA
ssDNA binds RecA, forming RecA*
RecA* stimulates autocleavage of LexA
SOS genes derepress, increasing repair protein expression
Cleavage of LexA (SOS derepression)
Cleavage of λ cI (lysogenic induction)
Activation of UmuD → UmuD′, necessary for mutagenic Pol V
LexA has a dimerization domain and a DNA-binding domain; cleavage separates them, preventing LexA from repressing SOS genes.
RecA* stimulates cleavage of UmuD → UmuD′, which then pairs with UmuC to form Pol V.
Pol V replaces the β-clamp interaction of Pol III, allowing the polymerase to synthesize across damaged bases without pausing for proofreading.
In the his⁻ reversion assay, UV mutagenesis occurs in wild-type, uvr⁻, and recBC⁻, but never in recA⁻ mutants, proving RecA is essential.
Irradiated phage survive better on UV-irradiated hosts
More phage progeny become mutant, proving an inducible mutagenic repair pathway
The mismatch repair system cannot identify the daughter strand, so it cuts both strands near AP mismatches, creating double-strand breaks, which kill the cell.
Mutation rate increases sharply because MutH is the endonuclease that cuts the unmethylated daughter strand, so mismatches cannot be removed.
Excision fails because UvrD cannot unwind and remove the damaged fragment, so the mismatch remains.
The cell will survive better than a dam⁻ strain, but show high mutation frequency, because mismatched bases are never recognized for repair.
Survival increases because dark-repair pathways (NER + recombination repair) operate while the cell is not dividing.
Severe UV sensitivity because the cell cannot perform NER, the main pathway that removes pyrimidine dimers. Recombination repair works but cannot fully compensate.
NER removes dimers, so survival is better than recA⁻ alone, but the cell cannot perform recombination repair or SOS induction, making it highly UV-sensitive and unable to tolerate replication-blocking lesions
Pol III stalls, then reinitiates downstream, leaving behind a single-stranded gap opposite the unrepaired dimer.
Strand invasion cannot occur, so the gap opposite the lesion never receives a healthy template, blocking completion of postreplication repair.
The junction cannot be resolved, leaving chromosomes linked and non-segregatable, likely causing cell death.
SOS genes are not induced, because LexA is uncleavable, so even RecA* cannot derepress the SOS regulon.
Survival drops sharply and UV mutagenesis is absent, because Pol V (UmuD′₂C) is required for error-prone lesion bypass.
No induction occurs because RecA* is required to cleave the λ cI repressor, so the prophage remains lysogenic.
SOS genes remain constitutively ON, because there is no LexA repressor, leading to continuous expression of din genes—even without damage.
No—UmuD cannot become UmuD′ without RecA*-mediated cleavage, so Pol V never forms, and error-prone repair will not occur.
Mismatch repair fails because MutH cannot be recruited to the MutS–MutL complex, so the unmethylated daughter strand is never nicked.
