TL;DR: It is shown that AlkB from Escherichia coli is indeed a 2-oxoglutarate-dependent and iron-dependent DNA repair enzyme that releases replication blocks in alkylated DNA by a mechanism involving oxidative demethylation of 1-methyladenine residues.
Abstract: The bacterial AlkB protein is known to be involved in cellular recovery from alkylation damage; however, the function of this protein remains unknown. AlkB homologues have been identified in several organisms, including humans, and a recent sequence alignment study has suggested that these proteins may belong to a superfamily of 2-oxoglutarate-dependent and iron-dependent oxygenases (2OG-Fe(ii)-oxygenases)1. Here we show that AlkB from Escherichia coli is indeed a 2-oxoglutarate-dependent and iron-dependent DNA repair enzyme that releases replication blocks in alkylated DNA by a mechanism involving oxidative demethylation of 1-methyladenine residues. This mechanism represents a new pathway for DNA repair and the third type of DNA damage reversal mechanism so far discovered.
TL;DR: An examination of the cross-reactivity of this response with other mutagens has shown that it is a generalised mechanism affecting alkylation damage to DNA, which cannot, however, be induced by UV or the UV-mimetic mutagen, 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide, nor act on lesions put into DNA by thosemutagens.
Abstract: We have described previously an inducible response in Escherichia coli which occurs during growth on low levels of the methylating agent, N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG), and which enables cells both to survive better and to be less mutated by a subsequent challenge dose of MNNG than control cultures (Samson and Cairns, 1977). We show here that this response is distinct from previously characterised pathways of DNA repair, and particularly from the SOS response, which is another inducible effect resulting from DNA damage. An examination of the cross-reactivity of this response with other mutagens has shown that it is a generalised mechanism affecting alkylation damage to DNA. It cannot, however, be induced by UV or the UV-mimetic mutagen, 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide, nor act on lesions put into DNA by those mutagens.
TL;DR: Self-methylation of the Ada protein by transfer of a methyl group from a phosphotriester in alkylated DNA to a cysteine residue in the protein converts it to an activator of transcription by a posttranslational modification event.
TL;DR: The isolation of one strain that was deficient in mutagenic adaptation and five that were deficient in bothmutagenic and killing adaptation are confirmed, confirming previous suggestions that killing and mutagenics adaptation are, at least to some extent, separable.
Abstract: When Esherichia coli cells are exposed to a low level of simple alkylating agents, they induce the adaptive response which renders them more resistant to the killing and the mutagenic effects of the same or other alkylating agents. This paper describes the isolation of one strain that was deficient in mutagenic adaptation and five that were deficient in both mutagenic and killing adaptation, confirming previous suggestions that killing and mutagenic adaptation are, at least to some extent, separable. These six strains have been called Ada mutants. They were more sensitive to the killing and mutagenic effects of N-methy-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine (MNNG) than the unadapted Ada+ parent. Thus, the adaptation pathway is responsible for circumventing some alkylation-induced damage even in cells that are preinduced. The increase in mutation frequency seen in Ada cells treated with MNNG was the same whether the cells were lexA+ or lexA, showing that the extra mutations found in Ada- strains do not depend upon the SOS pathway. Ada strains accumulated more O6-methyl guanine lesions than the Ada+ parent on prolonged exposure to MNNG, and this supports the idea that O6-methyl guanine is the most important lesion for MNNG-induced mutagenesis. The ada mutations have been shown to map in the 47 to 53-min region of the E. coli chromosome.