Abstract

ABSTRACTMicrobes and human cells possess mechanisms of mutagenesis activated by stress responses. Stress-inducible mutagenesis mechanisms may provide important models for mutagenesis that drives host-pathogen interactions, antibiotic resistance, and possibly much of evolution generally. In Escherichia coli, repair of DNA double-strand breaks is switched to a mutagenic mode, using error-prone DNA polymerases, via the SOS DNA damage and general (σS) stress responses. We investigated small RNA (sRNA) clients of Hfq, an RNA chaperone that promotes mutagenic break repair (MBR), and found that GcvB promotes MBR by allowing a robust σS response, achieved via opposing the membrane stress (σE) response. Cells that lack gcvB were MBR deficient and displayed reduced σS-dependent transcription but not reduced σS protein levels. The defects in MBR and σS-dependent transcription in ΔgcvB cells were alleviated by artificially increasing σS levels, implying that GcvB promotes mutagenesis by allowing a normal σS response. ΔgcvB cells were highly induced for the σE response, and blocking σE response induction restored both mutagenesis and σS-promoted transcription. We suggest that GcvB may promote the σS response and mutagenesis indirectly, by promoting membrane integrity, which keeps σE levels lower. At high levels, σE might outcompete σS for binding RNA polymerase and so reduce the σS response and mutagenesis. The data show the delicate balance of stress response modulation of mutagenesis.IMPORTANCE Mutagenesis mechanisms upregulated by stress responses promote de novo antibiotic resistance and cross-resistance in bacteria, antifungal drug resistance in yeasts, and genome instability in cancer cells under hypoxic stress. This paper describes the role of a small RNA (sRNA) in promoting a stress-inducible-mutagenesis mechanism, mutagenic DNA break repair in Escherichia coli. The roles of many sRNAs in E. coli remain unknown. This study shows that ΔgcvB cells, which lack the GcvB sRNA, display a hyperactivated membrane stress response and reduced general stress response, possibly because of sigma factor competition for RNA polymerase. This results in a mutagenic break repair defect. The data illuminate a function of GcvB sRNA in opposing the membrane stress response, and thus indirectly upregulating mutagenesis.

Highlights

  • Microbes and human cells possess mechanisms of mutagenesis activated by stress responses

  • We found that ⌬gcvB cells showed a significant 12-fold Ϯ 2-fold defect in Lacϩ mutagenic break repair (MBR) revertant accumulation (Fig. 1A and B, mean Ϯ standard errors of the means (SEM) mutation rate compared with the WT), a defect smaller than that of the ⌬hfq mutant

  • We found that GcvB, an small RNA (sRNA) client of Hfq, promotes mutagenic break repair (MBR) during starvation stress in E. coli in two different MBR assays (Fig. 1) and presented evidence that it does so by allowing a robust ␴S general/starvation stress response, apparently by suppressing the ␴E membrane stress response

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Summary

Introduction

Microbes and human cells possess mechanisms of mutagenesis activated by stress responses. This study shows that ⌬gcvB cells, which lack the GcvB sRNA, display a hyperactivated membrane stress response and reduced general stress response, possibly because of sigma factor competition for RNA polymerase. This results in a mutagenic break repair defect. In Escherichia coli, repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) by homologous recombination is switched to a mutagenic mode using error-prone DNA polymerases under the control of the SOS DNA damage response and the general stress response [1, 2, 6, 18,19,20]. The mutation signatures of ␴S-promoted mutagenesis are overrepresented in extant bacterial genomes, suggesting that MBR is widespread in bacterial mutagenesis in the wild [38]

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