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> 15 Sep 2004 18:06:06 -0000

 

> To Mutate or Not to Mutate

> press-release

>

>

> The Institute of Science in Society Science Society

> Sustainability http://www.i-sis.org.uk

>

> General Enquiries sam Website/Mailing

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> press-release ISIS Director

> m.w.ho

>

========================================================

>

>

>

> Life after the Central Dogma

>

> The biotech industry was launched on the scientific

> myth

> that organisms are hardwired in their genes, a myth

> thoroughly exploded by scientific findings

> accumulating

> since the mid 1970s and especially so since genome

> sequences

> have been accumulating (see Living with the Fluid

> Genome, by

> Mae-Wan Ho http://www.i-sis.org.uk/fluidGenome.php).

> We

> bring you the latest surprises that tell you why our

> health

> and environmental policies based on genetic

> engineering and

> genomics are completely misguided; and more

> importantly, why

> the new genetics demands a thoroughly ecological

> approach.

>

> Death of the Central Dogma

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/DCD.php

> Caring Mothers Reduce Response to Stress for Life

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/MCDIRTS.php

> Subverting the Genetic Text

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/RNASTGT.php

> To Mutate or Not to Mutate

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/TMONTM.php

>

>

>

> ISIS Press Release 15/09/04

> To Mutate or Not to Mutate

> **********************

>

> Contrary to views widely held not so long ago, genes

> do not

> as a rule mutate at random, and cells may choose

> what, or at

> least, when to mutate. Dr. Mae-Wan Ho reports

>

> A fully referenced version of this paper is posted

> on ISIS

> members' website

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/full/TMONTMFull.php.

> Details here http://www.i-sis.org.uk/membership.php.

>

> Non-random 'adaptive' mutations?

>

> The backbone of modern genetics and the

> neo-Darwinian theory

> of evolution by natural selection is that gene

> mutations

> occur at random, independently of the environment in

> which

> the organisms find themselves. Those mutations that

> happen

> to be 'adaptive' to the environment are 'selected',

> while

> those that are deleterious are weeded out.

>

> The idea that genes do not mutate at random, but

> 'adaptively', as though 'directed' by the

> environment in

> which the organisms find themselves, is so heretical

> that

> most biologists simply dismiss it out of hand; or

> try their

> utmost to explain away the observations that give

> life to

> the idea.

>

> Microbiologist Max Delbrück first used the term

> 'adaptive

> mutations' in1946 to refer to mutations formed in

> response

> to an environment in which the mutations are

> selected. The

> term was adopted more than 40 years later by a

> research team

> investigating gene amplification in rat cells. They

> distinguished between mutations that pre-exist at

> the time a

> cell is exposed to a selective environment from

> those

> 'adaptive' mutations formed after exposure to the

> environment.

>

> Other workers have followed the same definition.

> These

> 'adaptive' mutations arise in non-growing or slowly

> growing

> cells after the cells were exposed to conditions

> that favour

> the mutants, preferentially, though not exclusively,

> in

> those genes that could allow growth if mutated.

> Unselected

> mutations also accumulated in most studies, to

> varying

> degrees, so the mutations are not strictly

> 'directed'.

> Instead, the cells appear to activate a number of

> different

> mechanisms that target mutations to genes, the end

> result of

> which is to enable them to grow, which they

> otherwise would

> not be able to do.

>

> The archetypal experiment

>

> John Cairns and Patricia Foster created an E. coli

> strain

> defective in the lac gene that leaves the cells

> unable to

> grow on lactose. They plated out the bacteria on a

> minimal

> medium with lactose, and looked for mutants that

> revert back

> to normal. As the cells used up the small amount of

> nutrient

> they stopped growing. But after some time, mutants

> began to

> appear that could grow on lactose. However, the

> mutations

> are not strictly directed to the gene in which

> mutations

> could be advantageous, as unselected mutations also

> accumulated. In fact, the mechanisms look like

> " inducible

> genetic chaos " according to a reviewer.

>

> The defective lac gene in the E. coli strain was in

> fact a

> frameshift mutant, in which a small deletion or

> addition of

> a nucleotide shifted the whole reading frame of the

> gene, so

> it became translated into a totally different enzyme

> that

> has little or no ability to break down lactose. This

>

> defective lac gene was carried in an F' plasmid

> involved in

> bacterial conjugation. Two types of adaptive genetic

> change

> are now known to occur in the lac frameshift system:

> point

> mutations involving changes in base sequence of the

> DNA, and

> gene amplification involving the generation of

> multiple

> copies of the defective gene so that large amounts

> of

> defective enzyme can still function to metabolise

> enough

> lactose to allow the cells to grow.

>

> The point mutation mechanisms are highly diverse,

> and

> includes DNA breakage, recombination break repair,

> genome-

> wide hypermutation in a subpopulation of cells that

> give

> rise to some or all of the adaptive mutants, a

> special

> inducible mutation-generating DNA polymerase (polIV

> or DinB)

> that has homologues in all three domains of life.

> There are

> now many bacterial and yeast assay systems in which

> adaptive

> and stationary-phase mutations have been reported,

> but the

> mechanisms are largely unknown.

>

> Some of the mechanisms that underlie adaptive

> genetic change

> bear similarities to genetic instability in yeast

> and in

> some cancers and to somatic hypermutation in the

> immune

> system. They might also be important in bacterial

> evolution

> to antibiotic resistance, and the evolution of

> phase-

> variable pathogens, which evade the host immune

> system by

> frequent variation of their surface components.

>

> In the experiment, Lac+ mutants that existed before

> exposure

> to the lactose plates form visible colonies by about

> two

> days. The colonies that emerged after 2 days fall

> into two

> classes. Most of the Lac+ colonies (~160 /108 cells

> at 10

> days) are adaptive point mutants, which occur by a

> recombination dependent mechanism and produce

> compensatory

> frameshift mutations. On later days (from ~4), an

> increasing

> fraction (up to ~35 out of a total of ~160 on day

> 10) of the

> colonies are not point mutants but amplifications

> (20-50

> direct repeats) of a 7-40kb region of DNA that

> contains the

> lac frameshift gene, which provides sufficient gene

> activity

> to allow growth on lactose medium. The number of E.

> coli

> cells does not increase during the first five days.

>

> A profusion of mechanisms

>

> There are many ways to generate adaptive mutations.

>

> Interestingly, adaptive point mutations in the lac

> system

> requires homologous recombination proteins of the E.

> coli

> RecBCD double-strand break-repair system which is

> widely

> involved in gene conversion and recombination (see

> " How to

> keep in concert " , this series). Double-strand ends

> could be

> generated during DNA replication by a number of

> different

> mechanisms.

>

> The adaptive Lac+ point mutations that revert a

> framewhift

> allele are nearly all -1 deletions (deletion of a

> single

> nucleotide) in small mononucleotide repeats, whereas

> the

> pre-existing (non-adaptive) Lac+ reversions are

> heterogeneous. Mononcleotide repeat instability is

> thought

> to reflect DNA polymerase errors, which is

> consistent with

> the requirement of a special error-prone DNA

> polymerase

> (polIV) for adaptive mutations.

>

> The 'SOS response' is the bacteria's response to DNA

> damage

> or the inhibition of DNA replication. It involves

> de-

> repression of at least 42 genes that carry out DNA

> repair,

> recombination, mutation, translesion DNA synthesis

> (synthesis across non-repaired or damaged DNA) and

> prevent

> cell division.

>

> Global hypermutation is thought to occur in a

> subpopulation

> of the cells. This is because the frequencies of

> unselected

> mutations are about two orders of magnitude higher

> among

> Lac+ mutants than in the main population of Lac-

> starved

> cells. These results mean that stationary-phase

> mutations in

> this system are not directed exclusively to the lac

> gene,

> and both adaptive and neutral mutations are formed.

> Some or

> all of the adaptive mutants arise in a subpopulation

> that is

> hypermutable relative to the main population.

>

> The subpopulation of cells that are transiently

> mutable is

> estimated to be between 10-3 and 10-4 of all cells.

> Despite

> that, the frequency per unit length of DNA in the

> genome is

> markedly uneven, with definite hotspots and

> coldspots,

> perhaps depending on the proximity to double strand

> breaks

> (DSBs) in DNA that are generated.

>

> Gene amplification is 'adaptive' in the sense that

> it only

> occurs in response to the selective environment.

> Cells

> carrying the amplification are not hypermutated in

> unselected genes, and neither the SOS response nor

> polIV is

> required. Dependence on homologous recombination is

> implied

> in that adaptive Lac+ colonies do not appear in the

> absence

> of RecA and RecBCD enzyme, and RuvAB and C

> recombination

> proteins.

>

> Similar findings in bacteria isolated from the wild

>

> Until 2003, the phenomenon of adaptive mutations has

> been

> observed only in laboratory strains. But researchers

> from

> the University of Paris, France, and the National

> University

> of Mexico (UNAM) reported similar stress-inducible

> mutagenesis in stationary-phase bacterial colonies

> grown

> from strains culled from the wild. This provides

> evidence

> that most natural isolates of E. coli from diverse

> habitats

> worldwide increase their mutation rates in response

> to the

> stress of starvation.

>

> A total of 787 E. coli isolates were collected from

> habits

> including air, water and sediments, and the guts of

> a

> variety of host organisms. Colonies formed during

> the

> exponential growth phase were subjected to

> starvation during

> a prolonged stationary phase, and the production of

> mutants

> was monitored in the starved aging colonies. The

> vast

> majority of colonies showed an increased number of

> mutants.

> In a sample of colonies, the authors were able to

> link the

> increased mutagensis to starvation and oxidative

> stress by

> showing that either additional sugar or anaerobic

> incubation

> could block the increased mutagenesis.

>

> The bacteria were highly variable in their inducible

> mutator

> activity. The frequency of mutations conferring

> resistance

> to rifampicin (RifR) in day 1 (D1) and day 7 (D7)

> was

> measured. For all strains, the median values of RifR

>

> mutations were 5.8 x 10-9 on day 1, and 4.03 x 10-8

> on day

> 7, an increase of 7 fold, while the median number of

> colony-

> forming units increased 1.2-fold. In comparison, the

> E. coli

> K12 MG1655 lab strain showed a 5.5-fold increase in

> frequency of RifR and a 1.7 fold increase in colony

> forming

> units. Constitutive mutator strains having a D1

> mutation

> frequencies >10-fold or >100-fold higher than the

> median D1

> frequency of all the strains represented 3.3% and

> 1.4% of

> isolates respectively. The D7/D1 mutation frequency

> ratio

> showed that 45% of strains had more than a 10-fold,

> and 13%

> more than a 100-fold increase in mutagenesis over 7

> days.

> Interestingly, constitutive mutagenesis and MAC

> (mutagenesis

> in aging cells) showed a negative correlation.

>

> The MAC was genome wide in a large fraction of

> natural

> isolates. There was no significant correlation

> between MAC

> and phylogeny. The host's nutrition might explain

> some of

> the variation of MAC. For example, bacteria from the

> guts of

> omnivorous species like human beings have weaker

> stress-

> inducible mutator activities than those from

> carnivores.

>

> The mechanisms for generating mutations looked even

> more

> diverse than in the laboratory strains.

>

> Wider significance of adaptive mutations

>

> Amplification is an important manifestation of

> chromosomal

> instability prevalent in many human cancers, and

> DSBs in DNA

> are also involved. Induction of mammalian

> amplification by

> selective agents is correlated with the ability of

> those

> agents to produce chromosomal breaks.

>

> The adaptive point mutation mechanism at lac might

> be

> relevant to microbial evolution, particularly of

> pathogenic

> bacteria. Many phase variable pathogens have simple

> repeated

> sequences that flank genes that they regulate by

> frameshift

> mutation.

>

> These 'contingency genes' used under stress provide

> phase

> variations that allow evasions of the immune system.

> Two of

> them, Neisseria meningitides and N. gonorrhoeae,

> have one or

> more genes homologous to dinB. For many pathogenic

> bacteria,

> antibiotic resistance is also achieved by point

> mutation

> mechanisms and could be induced adaptively. Even

> antibiotics

> that cause lethality can be merely bacteriostatic at

> lower

> concentrations, such that stress-promoted mutation

> mechanisms might be significant in the development

> of

> resistance in clinical environments.

>

> In multicellular eukarytoes, parallels between

> adaptive

> mutation and cancer have been noted, the key being

> that

> acquisition of mutations in growth-limited state

> (stress)

> allows cells to proliferate.

>

> Humans have three E.coli polIV homologues of unknown

>

> function, in the DinB/UmuDC/Rad30/Rev1 superfamily

> of DNA

> polymerises, as well as a homologue known to carry

> out

> translesion synthesis (the tumour suppressor protein

> XP-V).

> DinB1 or polk, a true DinB orthologue, is found in

> germline

> and lymphoid cells. More and more geneticists now

> think that

> mutation is regulated, or at any rate, provoked, and

> highly

> non-random.

>

> Indeed, in one study on 12 long-term E coli lines,

> 36 genes

> were chosen at random, and 500 bp regions sequenced

> in four

> clones from each line and their ancestors. Several

> mutations

> were found in a few lines that evolved mutator

> phenotypes,

> but no mutations were found in any of the 8 lines

> that

> retained functional DNA repair throughout the 20 000

>

> generations experiment. This confirms the low level

> of

> 'spontaneous' or unprovoked mutation.

>

>

>

========================================================

>

> This article can be found on the I-SIS website at

> http://www.i-sis.org.uk/TMONTM.php

>

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