Impaired incision of ultraviolet-irradiated deoxyribonucleic acid in uvrC mutants of Escherichia coli.

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The production of single-strand breaks in the deoxyribonucleic acid of irradiated uvrC mutants of Escherichia coli K-12 was studied both in vivo and in vitro. In vivo, uvrC mutants displayed a slow accumulation of breaks after irradiation, and in this respect appeared different from uvrA mutants, in which very few breaks could be detected. The breakage observed in uvrC mutants differed from that observed in wild-type strains in both the slow rate of break accumulation and the very limited dose response. The behavior of the uvrC lig-7(Ts) double mutant was shown not to be consistent with the suggestion of ligase reversal as the explanation for the lower rate and limited dose response of break formation observed in ultraviolet-irradiated uvrC mutants in vivo. Rather, there appeared to be a real defect in incision. In toluene-treated cells, we studied the effect of the ligase inhibitor nicotinamide mononucleotide on strand incision. Whereas uvrC mutants displayed more strand breakage in the presence of this inhibitor, the same amount of breakage was seen in uvrA mutants, and as such the breakage could be judged as not due to the main excision repair pathway. Experiments using a cell-free system comprising the partially purified uvr+ gene products demonstrated clearly that there is a requirement for the uvrC+ gene product for strand incision. We suggest that in vivo in the absence of the uvrC+ gene product, a partial analog of this protein may allow some abnormal incision.

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