Abstract

Cells of wild-type Schizosacharomyces pombe exposed to UV radiation in either G1 or G2 phase show enhanced inactivation of colony-forming ability if plated in the presence of caffeine. This UV-sensitization by caffeine is abolished in both G1 and G2 phase cells by the rad1 mutation; since both caffeine and the rad1 mutation markedly reduce recombinational events, this suggests that a recombinational repair process is active in cells irradiated either in G1 or G2 phase. A prereplicative or sister chromatid exchange recombinational process appears to account for caffeine-sensitive repair of UV-damage in G2 cells (which possess at the time of radiation exposure the duplicated genome necessary for recombination), since caffeine-sensitive repair begins immediately and is completed before resumption of DNA synthesis. In contrast, since caffeine-sensitive repair of UV-damage in G1 cells displays a considerable lag and then occurs concomitantly with DNA synthesis, it appears that G1 cells must acquire a second genome in order to accomplish a caffeine-sensitive recovery process. Since a duplicated genome is required for caffeinesensitive repair, all such repair would seem to involve a recombinational mechanism. In G1 cells the process may be a post-replication recombinational mechanism. Since G2 phase cells are considerably more UV-resistant than G1 phase cells, the prereplicative recombinational process appears to be a much more efficient process for dealing with UV-induced damage than the post-replication mechanism. UV-induced mutagenesis was examined in wildtype and rad mutants using a forward mutation system. Rad mutants which show higher UV-induced mutation rates than wild-type retain UV-sensitization by caffeine (and thus presumably retain the recombinational mechanism). In contrast, rad strains which are relatively UV-immutable compared to wild-type do not possess the caffeine-sensitive UV-repair process. The recombinational process therefore may be the major pathway responsible for UV-induced mutation.

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