Abstract

Plasmid pLC44-14 from the Clarke and Carbon collection has been shown to carry the lexA gene. The presence of lexA was demonstrated by complementation of tsl mutants which lie close to lexA on the E. coli K-12 linkage map and are probably in the lexA gene, and by crossing the dominant lexA mutation on to pLC44-14 to produce a recombinant plasmid, pSEl, which gave the host cell the properties of a lexA mutant. The lexA gene has been cloned on to pBR322 (Little, 1980). pJL21, which carries the lexA + gene, rendered the host cell moderately sensitive to UV light, greatly reduced the extent of Weigle reactivation and mutagenesis of UV-irradiated phage λ, and inhibited induction of protein X by either UV light or nalidixic acid. A similar plasmid carrying a mutant lexA3 allele produced extreme sensitivity to UV light, reduced recombinant production 10 to 50-fold following Hfr x F− conjugation crosses, and otherwise mimicked the effects of pJL21. Introduction of an amber mutation into the lexA gene carried by the plasmid greatly reduced the UV-sensitivity of the host, thereby indicating that the extreme sensitivity was due to the mutant lexA gene product. These properties of strains with lexA plasmids are thought to originate from high levels of the lexA protein in the cell due to a large plasmid copy number. This protein, which appears from other studies to regulate negatively the recA gene, may inhibit expression of recA or other DNA repair genes when present in excess amounts in the cell.

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