4.8 Article

Oxidative DNA damage is instrumental in hyperreplication stress-induced inviability of Escherichia coli

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 42, Issue 21, Pages 13228-13241

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gku1149

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Funding

  1. European Union [PIRG05-GA-2009-247241]
  2. Danish Research Council for Natural sciences [09-064250/FNU]
  3. Lundbeck Foundation
  4. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  5. University of Copenhagen
  6. Lundbeck Foundation [R100-2011-9542] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. Novo Nordisk Fonden [NNF12OC0001802] Funding Source: researchfish

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In Escherichia coli, an increase in the ATP bound form of the DnaA initiator protein results in hyperinitiation and inviability. Here, we show that such replication stress is tolerated during anaerobic growth. In hyperinitiating cells, a shift from anaerobic to aerobic growth resulted in appearance of fragmented chromosomes and a decrease in terminus concentration, leading to a dramatic increase in ori/ter ratio and cessation of cell growth. Aerobic viability was restored by reducing the level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) or by deleting mutM (Fpg glycosylase). The double-strand breaks observed in hyperinitiating cells therefore results from replication forks encountering single-stranded DNA lesions generated while removing oxidized bases, primarily 8-oxoG, from the DNA. We conclude that there is a delicate balance between chromosome replication and ROS inflicted DNA damage so the number of replication forks can only increase when ROS formation is reduced or when the pertinent repair is compromised.

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