Deinococcus radiodurans Rl and other members of this genus share extraordinary resistance to the lethal and mutagenic effects of ionizing radiation. We have recently identified a RecA homolog in strain RI and have shown that mutation of the corresponding gene causes marked radiosensitivity. We show here that following high-level exposure to gamma irradiation (1.75 megarads, the dose required to yield 37% of CFU for plateau-phase wild-type R1), the wild-type strain repairs >150 double-strand breaks per chromosome, whereas a recA-defective mutant (rec30) repairs very few or none. A heterologous Escherichia coli-D. radiodurans shuttle plasmid (pMD68) was constructed and found to be retained in surviving D. radiodurans Rl and rec30 following any radiation exposure up to the highest dose tested, 3 megarads. Plasmid repair was monitored in vivo following irradiation with 1.75 megarads in both R1/pMD68 and rec30/pMD68. Immediately after irradiation, plasmids from both strains contained numerous breaks and failed to transform E. coli. While irradiation with 1.75 megarads was lethal to rec30 cultures, a small amount of supercoiled plasmid was regenerated, but it lacked the ability to transform E. coli. In contrast, wild-type cultures showed a cell division arrest of about 10 h, followed by exponential growth. Supercoiled plasmid was regenerated at normal levels, and it readily transformed E. coli. These studies show that D. radiodurans retains a heterologous plasmid following irradiation and repairs it with the same high efficiency as its chromosomal DNA, while the repair defect in rec30 prevents repair of the plasmid. Taken together, the results of this study suggest that plasmid DNA damaged in vivo in D. radiodurans is repaired by recA-dependent mechanisms similar to those employed in the repair of chromosomal DNA.
Deinococcus radiodurans and other species of the same genus share extreme resistance to ionizing radiation and many other agents that damage DNA. Two different DNA damage-sensitive strains generated by chemical mutagenesis were found to be defective in a gene that has extended DNA and protein sequence homology with poL4 of Escherichia coli. Both mutant strains lacked DNA polymerase, as measured in activity gels. Transformation of this gene from wild-type D. radiodurans restored to the mutants both polymerase activity and DNA damage resistance. A technique for targeted insertional mutagenesis in D. radiodurans is presented. This technique was employed to construct a pol mutant isogenic with the wild type (the first example of targeted mutagenesis in this eubacterial family). This insertional mutant lacked DNA polymerase activity and was even more sensitive to DNA damage than the mutants derived by chemical mutagenesis. In the case of ionizing radiation, the survival of the wild type after receiving 1 Mrad was 100%o while survival of the insertional mutant extrapolated to 10-24. These results demonstrate that the gene described here encodes a DNA polymerase and that defects in this pol gene cause a dramatic loss of resistance of D. radiodurans to DNA damage.
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