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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Study of adaptive mutations in Salmonella typhimurium by using a super-repressing mutant of a trans regulatory gene purR.

Salmonella typhimurium purR encodes a transcriptional repressor regulating gene expression of de novo purine nucleotide biosynthesis. It represses purD gene transcription by binding to the 16-base pair purD operator (PUR box). A S. typhimurium strain carrying a super-repressing mutant of purR, purR(s), has been used as an experimental system to study adaptive mutation. Escherichia coli lac genes were genetically engineered into S. typhimurium chromosome and repressed by purR(s) so that they could be used as an indicator of adaptive mutations in purR(s) or in the purD operator. Mutations in purR(s) or in the purD operator accumulated when the mutant strain was placed on a minimal lactose plate supplemented with 10 microg/ml of adenine during prolonged incubation. These specific mutations reverted the mutant strain from lac(-) to lac(+) phenotype. The lac(+) strains were categorized into the early- and late-arising mutants according to the time for colony appearance. Our genetic studies indicate that (i) Poisson distributed mutations accumulated in the chromosomal regulatory gene purR or the purD operator in very slowly dividing cells under selection; (ii) after about 8 days of selection, the frequency of mutations in purD operator reached the high value of about two mutations per 10(8) cells; (iii) the mutational spectrum in the purD operator during growth was not significantly different from that during selection; (iv) defects in mutL or mutS appeared to have a stronger effect on growth-dependent mutations than on adaptive mutations.[1]

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