1. Deuterium-depletion has no significant impact on the mutation rate ofEscherichia coli, invalidating the Double D-Bridge Hypothesis
- Author
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Ajibola W, Somlyai G, Karcagi I, Somlyai I, and Tamás F
- Subjects
Mutation rate ,Isotope ,Deuterium ,Base pair ,Chemistry ,Mutant ,Mutation (genetic algorithm) ,medicine ,Geometric mean ,medicine.disease_cause ,Molecular biology ,Escherichia coli - Abstract
Deuterium (D), the second most abundant isotope of hydrogen is present in natural waters at an approximate concentration of 145-155 ppm (cca. 1.5E-4 atom/atom). D is known to influence various biological processes due to its physical and chemical properties, which significantly differ from those of hydrogen. For example, increasing D-concentration to >1000-fold above its natural abundance has been shown to increase the frequency of genetic mutations in several species. The Double D-Bridge Hypothesis, formulated with the intent of explaining the mechanism of D-mutagenicity is based on the calculation that the theoretical frequency of A:T base pairs that comprise two D-bridges instead of H-bridges is 2E-8, which is equal to the mutation rate of certain species. To experimentally challenge this hypothesis, and to infer the mutagenicity of D present at natural concentrations, we investigated the effect of a nearly 100-fold reduction of D concentration on the bacterial mutation rate. Using fluctuation tests, we measured the mutation rate of threeEscherichia coligenes (cycA, ackAandgalK) in media containing D at either E. coliis therefore below the limit of detection using the indicated methods.
- Published
- 2020