Role of DNA replication in the induction and turn-off of the SOS response in Escherichia coli
- PMID: 6808321
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00334136
Role of DNA replication in the induction and turn-off of the SOS response in Escherichia coli
Abstract
We have studied the role of DNA replication in turn-on and turn-off of the SOS response in Escherichia coli using a recA::lac fusion to measure levels of recA expression. An active replication fork does not seem to be necessary for mitomycin C induced recA expression: a dnaA43 initiation defective mutant, which does not induce the SOS response at non-permissive temperature, remains mitomycin C inducible after the period of residual DNA synthesis. This induction seems to be dnaC dependent since in a dnaC325 mutant recA expression not only is not induced at 42 degrees C but becomes mitomycin C non-inducible after the period of residual synthesis. Unscheduled halts in DNA replication, generally considered the primary inducing event, are not sufficient to induce the SOS response: no increase in recA expression was observed in dnaG(Ts) mutants cultivated at non-permissive temperature. The replication fork is nonetheless involved in induction, as seen by the increased spontaneous level of recA expression in these strains at permissive temperature. Turn-off of SOS functions can be extremely rapid: induction of recA expression by thymine starvation is reversed within 10 min after restoration of normal DNA replication. We conclude that the factors involved in induction--activated RecA (protease) and the activating molecular (effector)--do not persist in the presence of normal DNA replication.
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