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ImuA Facilitates SOS Mutagenesis by Inhibiting RecA-Mediated Activity in Myxococcus xanthus.

Authors :
Duohong Sheng
Ye Wang
Zhiwei Jiang
Dongkai Liu
Yuezhong Li
Source :
Applied & Environmental Microbiology. Sep2021, Vol. 87 Issue 18, p1-13. 13p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Bacteria have two pathways to restart stalled replication forks caused by environmental stresses, error-prone translesion DNA synthesis (TLS) catalyzed by TLS polymerase and error-free template switching catalyzed by RecA, and their competition on the arrested fork affects bacterial SOS mutagenesis. DnaE2 is an error-prone TLS polymerase, and its functions require ImuA and ImuB. Here, we investigated the transcription of imuA, imuB, and dnaE2 in UV-C-irradiated Myxococcus xanthus and found that the induction of imuA occurred significantly earlier than that of the other two genes. Mutant analysis showed that unlike that of imuB or dnaE2, the deletion of imuA significantly delayed bacterial regrowth and slightly reduced the bacterial mutation frequency and UV resistance. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that the absence of ImuA released the expression of some known SOS genes, including recA1, recA2, imuB, and dnaE2. Yeast two-hybrid and pulldown analyses proved that ImuA interacts physically with RecA1 besides ImuB. Protein activity analysis indicated that ImuA had no DNA-binding activity but inhibited the DNA-binding and recombinase activity of RecA1. These findings indicate the new role of ImuA in SOS mutagenesis; that is, ImuA inhibits the recombinase activity of RecA1, thereby facilitating SOS mutagenesis in M. xanthus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00992240
Volume :
87
Issue :
18
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Applied & Environmental Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152222119
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00919-21