Abstract

A genetic strategy was designed to examine the occurrence of mutations in stationary-phase populations. In this strategy, a parental population of cells is able to survive under both permissive and restrictive conditions whereas mutants at a particular target locus exhibit a conditional-lethal phenotype. Thus, by growing the population to stationary phase under restrictive conditions and then shifting it to permissive conditions, mutations that had arisen in stationary phase can be studied without confounding effects caused by the occurrence of similar mutations during growth of the population. In two different applications of this strategy, we have studied the reversion to Lac+ in stationary phase of several Lac- mutations in Escherichia coli. Our results indicate that a variety of spontaneous point mutations and deletions, particularly those that are sensitive to the mechanisms of replication slippage (for their generation) and methyl-directed mismatch repair (for their correction), can arise in nondividing populations of cells within a colony. The frequency of their occurrence was also elevated in mutS strains, which are defective in such mismatch repair. These data have relevance to the ongoing debate on adaptive or directed mutations in bacteria.

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