Abstract

The mutagenicity of the DNA base O-alkylation adduct, O 4-ethylthymine, specifically incorporated into the plasmid vector pUC8 at the unique SalI and HincII recognition sites, was studied in vivo. Escherichia coli, Micrococcus luteus and AMV DNA polymerases catalyze the incorporation of O 4-ethylTMP against template adenine and guanine residues, resulting in DNA sequence alteration during subsequent replication in the host E. coli K-12 strain JM83. The greatest mutation frequency was observed with error-prone AMV DNA polymerase. High levels of cognate restriction endonuclease-resistant mutant plasmid isolates were obtained by gap replication repair in the presence of O 4-ethylTTP. The yields of mutant isolates were dependent upon the relative concentration of the competing pyrimidine deoxynucleoside triphosphates, TTP and dCTP, in the misreplication reaction. Repair of incorporated O 4-ethyITMP of plasmid DNA by in vitro treatment with specific alkyltransferase, prior to transformation in the host, effectively increases the mutagenic efficiency of the adduct. The results obtained are consistent with the high miscoding potential O 4-ethylthymine observed in in vitro studies and its ability to base-pair with noncomplementary guanine residues in DNA.

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