The Mechanism of Reca Pola Lethality: Suppression by Reca-Independent Recombination Repair Activated by the Lexa(def) Mutation in Escherichia Coli

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The mechanism of recA polA lethality in Escherichia coli has been studied. Complementation tests have indicated that both the 5' -> 3' exonuclease and the polymerization activities of DNA polymerase I are essential for viability in the absence of RecA protein, whereas the viability and DNA replication of DNA polymerase I-defective cells depend on the recombinase activity of RecA. An alkaline sucrose gradient sedimentation analysis has indicated that RecA has only a minor role in Okazaki fragment processing. Double-strand break repair is proposed for the major role of RecA in the absence of DNA polymerase I. The lexA(Def)::Tn5 mutation has previously been shown to suppress the temperature-sensitive growth of recA200(Ts) polA25::spc mutants. The lexA(Def) mutation can alleviate impaired DNA synthesis in the recA200(Ts) polA25::spc mutant cells at the restrictive temperature. recF(+) is essential for this suppression pathway. recJ and recQ mutations have minor but significant adverse effects on the suppression. The recA200(Ts) allele in the recA200(Ts) polA25::spc lexA(Def) mutant can be replaced by δrecA, indicating that the lexA(Def)-induced suppression is RecA independent. lexA(Def) reduces the sensitivity of δrecA polA25::spc cells to UV damage by ~10(4)-fold. lexA(Def) also restores P1 transduction proficiency to the δrecA polA25::spc mutant to a level that is 7.3% of the recA(+) wild type. These results suggest that lexA(Def) activates a RecA-independent, RecF-dependent recombination repair pathway that suppresses the defect in DNA replication in recA polA double mutants.

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