The 2 broad sources are mistakes during DNA replication and chemical/environmental factors (such as heat, chemicals, and irradiation).
DNA replication usually has high fidelity, but occasional errors still occur, which can introduce mutations.
Heat causes deamination of bases; chemicals add groups to bases or sugars, break bonds, or fuse molecular parts; irradiation deposits photon energy in DNA, causing bond breakage or fusion of DNA parts.
Survival curves and mutant sensitivity are used; survival curves measure the fraction of surviving cells/plaques vs dose, while mutant sensitivity compares how well DNA repair–defective strains survive mutagen exposure.
The y-axis shows percent survival (or fraction surviving), and the x-axis shows irradiation time or dose, often on a logarithmic scale
As UV dose increases, survival decreases, and there is usually an initial flat region where early damage does not immediately kill cells.
260 nm, where DNA absorbs strongly, kills cells much more effectively than 280 nm, where protein absorbs more strongly; thus DNA is the main target of lethal UV damage.
First, UV at 260 nm kills cells more than 280 nm (implicating DNA); second, mutant strains defective in DNA repair are more sensitive to killing by mutagens.
DNA repair–defective mutants show a steeper drop in survival and reduced overall survival, indicating that their repair capacity is impaired compared with wild-type.
Mutagens kill cells primarily by causing blocks in DNA replication (e.g., stalled DNA polymerase) and double-strand breaks that cannot be repaired, leading to cell death.
These mutagens often do not affect base pairing directly but distort the DNA helix (as with pyrimidine dimers), causing DNA polymerase to stall during proofreading.
UV forms pyrimidine dimers, the dimers remain correctly base-paired to the opposite strand, but DNA polymerase detects the distortion and stalls because it cannot correct the lesion.
Common exam mistake: Thinking dimers “break base pairing”; actually they distort structure, not the coding information itself.
Double-strand breaks are usually irreparable in bacteria, leading directly to cell death.
Survival curves show an initial plateau at low doses (where repair is efficient and prevents death) followed by a steep decline at higher doses when repair systems become saturated or damaged.
Irradiated bacteria survive better when exposed to visible light (300–600 nm) before plating, and this is due to activation of a photolyase enzyme that specifically cleaves thymine dimers.
UV-irradiated phages form more plaques on bacteria that were pre-exposed to visible light, indicating that host photolyase repairs phage DNA dimers during infection.
DNA repair mutants show diminished survival after mutagen treatment, and their mutations map to genes encoding DNA repair enzymes.
Specific repair pathways recognize particular types of lesions (e.g., deaminated bases), while general repair pathways recognize distortions in DNA caused by many kinds of damage.
The 5 specific repair targets are deaminated bases, T:G mismatches from 5-methylcytosine (VSP repair), oxidative damage, alkylation damage, and pyrimidine dimers.
The 3 general repair categories are CH₃-directed mismatch repair, nucleotide excision repair, and DNA damage tolerance/SOS inducible repair.
(1) A damage-specific glycosylase removes the abnormal base; (2) an AP endonuclease cuts the backbone at the AP site (usually 5'); (3) the 5'→3' exonuclease activity of DNA Pol I degrades the damaged strand; (4) DNA Pol I fills in using the 3'-OH as a primer; (5) DNA ligase seals the nick.
DNA glycosylases initiate repair by cleaving the base from deoxyribose, and AP endonucleases cut the DNA backbone next to the AP site to allow replacement.
DNA Pol I provides 5'→3' exonuclease activity to remove damaged nucleotides and polymerase activity to synthesize new DNA using the intact strand as template.
Deamination arises from mutagens (e.g., hydroxylamine, bisulfite, nitrous acid) and spontaneously, typically causing transition mutations such as GC→AT or CG→TA.
Hydroxylamine (HA) and bisulfite both convert C→U, which, after replication, typically results in a GC→AT transition.
Nitrous acid can deaminate C→U, A→hypoxanthine, and G→xanthine, leading to GC→AT and AT→GC transition mutations.
C→U and 5-methylcytosine (5-CH₃-C)→T occur spontaneously, causing GC→AT and CG→TA transitions, respectively, if not repaired.
Most likely long-answer angle: Why 5-methylcytosine is a hotspot for mutations.
The repair uses damage-specific DNA glycosylases, AP endonuclease, the 5' exonuclease and polymerase activities of DNA Pol I, and DNA ligase to restore the correct base.
A glycosylase removes U, AP endonuclease cuts the backbone, then DNA Pol I and ligase replace and seal the correct nucleotide.
Glycosylases provide lesion specificity, recognizing and removing inappropriate bases (like U in DNA) while leaving the sugar–phosphate backbone intact for subsequent repair.
5-methylcytosine is formed by Dcm methylase at the second C in 5'-CCWGG-3' / 3'-GGWCC-5', is used in restriction/modification and gene regulation, and its deamination produces T, creating a T:G mismatch hotspot.
VSP repair acts on T:G mismatches that arise from 5-methylcytosine deamination, especially when they occur after replication and methylation and thus escape standard mismatch repair.
VSP endonuclease binds the T:G mismatch and cuts next to T, DNA Pol I removes T and resynthesizes DNA, and DNA ligase seals the gap.
The VSP endonuclease gene lies next to the Dcm methyltransferase gene, and VSP repair specifically fixes the T:G mismatches produced by Dcm-methylated cytosines, indicating coevolution.
The T can remain and pair with A, leading to a permanent transition mutation, or the G may be removed by other repair, potentially causing different local sequence changes depending on which strand is fixed.
Reactive oxygen species arise from normal metabolism, environmental exposure, and chemical agents.
The most common oxidative lesion is 7,8-dihydro-8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG), which is derived from guanine.
8-oxoG mis-pairs with A, leading to GC→TA transversions, and related mispairing can also contribute to TA→GC transversions.
MutM (N-glycosylase/AP endonuclease) removes 8-oxoG from DNA, MutY (N-glycosylase) removes A mispaired with 8-oxoG, and MutT (phosphatase) degrades 8-oxodGTP to 8-oxodGMP, preventing its incorporation.
“mut” genes like mutM, mutY, mutT (oxidative repair) and mutD, mutS, mutL, mutH (proofreading and mismatch repair) are mutator genes whose mutation increases spontaneous mutation rates.
mutD (dnaQ) encodes the editing subunit of DNA Pol III, while mutS, mutL, mutH encode components of methyl-directed mismatch repair.
Mutations in each gene cause distinct increases in mutation frequency, and combining them produces additive increases, showing that they act in separate, nonredundant pathways.
Common exam mistake: Assuming they are all in one linear pathway; in fact they act independently at different stages (nucleotide pool vs DNA).
More 8-oxoGTP enters DNA, increasing 8-oxoG-containing bases, but MutM and MutY can still remove many lesions, partially limiting the mutation rate.
Alkylating agents add methyl (CH₃) or ethyl (C₂H₅) groups to bases or phosphates, which can alter base pairing and cause subtle or large distortions in the DNA helix.
Major distortions are handled by general repair pathways (e.g., nucleotide excision repair), while subtle distortions are corrected by specific alkylation repair pathways.
They use an adaptive response (Ada protein and inducible proteins), N-glycosylases such as AlkA, and direct reversal by methyltransferases that remove alkyl groups from specific positions.
Ada acts as a methyltransferase that accepts alkyl groups, its N-terminal methylation converts it into a transcriptional activator that recruits RNA polymerase, and it induces expression of adaptive response proteins (including more Ada, AlkA, AlkB, AidB).
AlkA removes alkylated bases such as 3-methylguanine, 3-methyladenine, and 7-methylguanine, initiating base-excision repair of alkylated lesions.
These methyltransferases transfer the alkyl group from O6 of G or O4 of T to a cysteine residue in themselves, which irreversibly inactivates the enzyme (“suicide” inactivation).
(1) N-terminal methylation changes Ada’s conformation to bind specific promoters and upregulate transcription/translation of Ada and glycosylases; (2) increased AlkA, AlkB, AidB expression removes more alkylated bases; (3) C-terminal methylation causes Ada to act as a direct methyltransferase on DNA and then be degraded, no longer activating transcription.
Their expression increases upon exposure to alkylating agents, and Ada’s N-terminal methylation directly converts it into a transcriptional activator, boosting the adaptive response.
The initial exposure induces Ada and related proteins, so during a later stronger treatment the cell has higher levels of repair enzymes, leading to increased survival compared with naïve cells.
UV irradiation causes bases to absorb energy strongly, increasing the reactivity of double bonds and resulting in abnormal covalent bonds that link adjacent bases, such as pyrimidine dimers.
Pyrimidine dimers covalently link adjacent pyrimidines and create a kink or distortion in the DNA helix, interfering with replication and transcription.
Photoreactivation specifically repairs cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, was the first DNA repair system discovered, and uses visible light (300–600 nm)–activated photolyase to split fused bases.
In the 1940s, Albert Kelner showed that Streptomyces griseus survives UV better in light than in dark, leading to the discovery that photolyase repairs dimers using visible light.
Photolyase binds the fused bases, its FADH₂ cofactor absorbs visible light, and the absorbed energy drives separation of the covalently linked pyrimidines, restoring normal base pairing.
UV-irradiated phage DNA can be repaired by photolyase in the host bacteria, and plaque formation increases when infected bacteria have been exposed to visible light, showing repair before or during infection.
Without visible light, UV causes steeper survival decline (damage only), whereas with visible light, curves shift upward (higher survival), directly indicating active repair via photoreactivation.
MutM removes 8-oxoG from DNA, MutY removes A paired with 8-oxoG, and MutT hydrolyzes 8-oxo-dGTP in the nucleotide pool so it cannot be incorporated. Together they stop both formation and propagation of GC→TA transversions.
MutM recognizes the lesion, glycosylase activity removes the damaged base, AP endonuclease activity cuts the backbone, and downstream Pol I + ligase fill and seal the corrected site.
8-oxoG forms anti–syn mispairs with A, and replication uses this mispair as a template, inserting T opposite the A, locking in a GC→TA mutation.
VSP endonuclease recognizes the T:G mismatch in 5′-CCWGG-3′ sites, nicks the DNA near the T, and Pol I removes and replaces T, followed by ligase sealing the strand.
5-methylcytosine spontaneously deaminates to thymine, creating a normal-appearing T that escapes mismatch repair, making mutation fixation more likely.
Ada transfers alkyl groups to itself, N-terminal methylation activates Ada as a transcription factor, and C-terminal methylation inactivates it as it performs direct repair
Methylated Ada binds adaptive-response promoters, recruits RNA polymerase, and upregulates AlkA, AlkB, AidB, and more Ada, amplifying repair capacity.
AlkA removes alkylated bases via glycosylase activity, creating an AP site, which is then processed by AP endonuclease → Pol I → ligase.
Photolyase binds the dimer, absorbs visible light using FADH₂, and uses that energy to split the covalent bond, restoring normal base pairing.
(1) A glycosylase removes the damaged base, (2) AP endonuclease cuts the backbone, (3) Pol I excises and resynthesizes the region, and (4) DNA ligase seals the final nick.
