# | Rank | Similarity | Title + Abs. | Year | PMID |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| 540 | 0 | 1.0000 | Effect of ogt expression on mutation induction by methyl-, ethyl- and propylmethanesulphonate in Escherichia coli K12 strains. We have previously reported the isolation of an Escherichia coli K12 mutant that is extremely sensitive to mutagenesis by low doses of ethylating agents. We now show by Southern analysis that the mutation involves a gross deletion covering at least the ogt and fnr genes and that no O6-alkylguanine-DNA-alkyltransferase activity is present in cell-free extracts of an ada::Tn10 derivative of these bacteria. Confirmation that sensitisation to ethylation-induced mutagenesis was attributable to ogt and not to any other loci covered by the deletion was obtained by constructing derivatives. Thus an ogt::kanr disruption mutation was introduced into the parental ogt+ bacteria, and the ogt::kanr mutation was then eliminated by cotransduction of ogt+ with the closely linked Tetr marker (zcj::Tn10). The delta(ogt-fnr) deletion or ogt::kanr disruption mutants were highly sensitive to ethyl methanesulphonate-induced mutagenesis, as measured by the induction of forward mutations to L-arabinose resistance (Arar). Furthermore, the number of Arar mutants increased linearly with dose, unlike the case in ogt+ bacteria, which had a threshold dose below which no mutants accumulated. Differences in mutability were even greater with propyl methanesulphonate. Overproduction of the ogt alkyltransferase from a multicopy plasmid reduced ethylmethanesulphonate-induced mutagenesis in the ogt- mutant strains and also methylmethanesulphonate mutagenesis in ada- bacteria. A sample of AB1157 obtained from the E. coli K12 genetic stock centre also had a deletion covering the ogt and fnr genes. Since such deletions greatly influence the mutagenic responses to alkylating agents, a survey of the presence of the ogt gene in the E. coli K12 strain being used is advisable. | 1994 | 8152424 |
| 342 | 1 | 0.9970 | Heat-shock-increased survival to far-UV radiation in Escherichia coli is wavelength dependent. Heat-shock-induced resistance to far-UV (FUV) radiation was studied in Escherichia coli. The induction of FUV resistance was shown to be dependent on the products of the genes uvrA and polA in bacteria irradiated at 254 nm. Heat shock increased the resistance to 280 nm radiation in a uvrA6 recA13 mutant. Heat shock lowered the mutation frequency (reversion to tryptophan proficiency) in wild-type or uvrA strains irradiated at 254 nm. When these strains were irradiated at 280 nm, heat shock did not interfere with the mutation frequency in the wild-type strain, but greatly enhanced mutations in the uvrA mutant. After heat-shock treatment, the wild-type strain irradiated at 254 nm showed increased DNA degradation, indicating enhanced repair activity. However, heat shock did not stimulate SOS repair triggered by FUV. An increased survival of bacteriophages irradiated with FUV and inoculated into heat-shock-treated bacteria was not detected. The possibility that heat shock enhances excision repair activity in a wavelength-dependent manner is discussed. | 1994 | 8176549 |
| 339 | 2 | 0.9970 | Multiple mechanisms of resistance to cisplatin toxicity in an Escherichia coli K12 mutant. The mechanisms underlying cellular resistance to the antitumor drug cis-diamminedichloro-platinum(II) (CDDP) were studied in Escherichia coli K12. A bacterial strain (MC4100/DDP) was selected from the MC4100 wild-type strain after growth for four cycles in CDDP. MC4100/DDP bacteria showed a high level of resistance and exhibited various modifications including (1) a decrease in drug uptake and platinum/DNA binding which only partly contributed to resistance, (2) an increase in glutathione content not involved in the resistant phenotype, (3) an increase in DNA repair capacity. Resistance was unmodified by introducing a uvrA mutation which neutralizes the excision-repair pathway. In contrast, it was abolished by deletion of the recA gene which abolishes recombination and SOS repair but also by a mutation in the recA gene leading to RecA co-protease minus (no SOS induction). RecA protein was unchanged in MC4100/DDP but the expression of RecA-dependent gene(s) was required for CDDP resistance. The regulation of genes belonging to the SOS regulon was analysed in MC4100/DDP by monitoring the expression of sfiA and recA::lacZ gene fusions after UV irradiation. These gene fusions were derepressed faster and the optimal expression was obtained for a lower number of UV lesions in MC4100/DDP, suggesting a role of RecA co-protease activity in the mechanism of resistance to CDDP in this E. coli strain. | 1994 | 7974517 |
| 6203 | 3 | 0.9970 | Effect of induction of SOS response on expression of pBR322 genes and on plasmid copy number. Several lines of evidence are presented that indicate that the level of tetracycline resistance of Esherichia coli strains harboring plasmid pBR322 varies according to whether the SOS system of the host bacteria has been induced. These include use of strains in which the SOS system is expressed constitutively (lexA def.), is thermoinducible (recA441) or noninducible (lexA ind-), or is highly repressed (multiple copies of lexA+). Similar induction was observed with the product of another plasmid gene, beta-lactamase. The amounts of extractable plasmid DNA were also increased by SOS induction, and we propose that the SOS-induced increases in levels of tetracycline resistance and beta-lactamase activity are due to an increased plasmid copy number. | 1989 | 2695953 |
| 380 | 4 | 0.9969 | Expression of a chloramphenicol-resistance determinant carried on hybrid plasmids in gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. To analyse the control of chloramphenicol (Cm) resistance conferred by the Staphylococcus aureus plasmid pUB112, a detailed restriction map of this plasmid has been constructed, and the position and orientation of the cat gene have been determined. An MboI restriction fragment carrying the entire cat gene of pUB112 was then cloned in another S. aureus plasmid, the kanamycin (Km) resistance vector pUB110. Depending on the orientation of the incorporated cat fragment, the level of Cm resistance varied dramatically in Bacillus subtilis cells. This effect could not be eliminated by deleting parts of the vector DNA, and only the introduction of a transcription termination signal led to orientation-independent Cm resistance. One such construct was further developed to yield a shuttle vector, replicating both in Escherichia coli and B. subtilis. Using this vector the expression of incorporated genes can be determined in both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria. By in vitro transcription experiments using pUB110 DNA linearized with various restriction endonucleases as template, two pUB110 promoters could be localized and their orientations determined: one promoter controls a gene whose function is unknown, the other regulates the transcription of the KmR gene. | 1984 | 6442250 |
| 341 | 5 | 0.9969 | UV resistance of E. coli K-12 deficient in cAMP/CRP regulation. Deletion of genes for adenylate cyclase (delta cya) or cAMP receptor protein (delta crp) in E. coli K-12 confers a phenotype that includes resistance to UV radiation (254 nm). Such mutations lead to UV resistance of uvr+, uvrA, lexA and recA strains which could partly be abolished by the addition of cAMP to delta cya but not to delta crp strain culture medium. This effect was not related to either inducibility of major DNA repair genes or growth rate of the bacteria. Enhanced survival was also observed for UV-irradiated lambda bacteriophage indicating that a repair mechanism of UV lesions was involved in this phenomenon. | 1992 | 1379686 |
| 334 | 6 | 0.9968 | Transformation of soybean protoplasts from permanent suspension cultures by cocultivation with cells of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Cell wall regenerating protoplasts from soybean cells kept in suspension culture were cocultivated with bacteria which were derived from the nopaline strain C58 of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. When the bacteria carried an oncogenic Ti-plasmid, about 5% of the surviving protoplasts were able to form calli on hormone-free agar in contrast to controls, where bacteria without Ti-plasmid were applied, and where no calli were formed. After isolation of DNA from hormone-independently growing cells further evidence for transformation was obtained by hybridization to Ti-plasmid specific RNA and by rescue of a segment with a bacterial resistance gene which had been inserted before into the T-DNA. Transfer of T-DNA harboring a neomycin-resistance gene activated by the nos-promoter resulted in calli growing on kanamycin. Verification of segments located at the left and the right part of the T-DNA indicated the presence of its entire length in transformed soybean cells. Expression of T-DNA genes was measured by the assay of nopaline-synthase. Cells cultured on agar had a much higher level of nopaline-synthase than fast growing cells in suspension culture. Transferring them to agar or treatment with azacytidine strongly increased synthesis of nopaline-synthase indicating a reversible repression presumably via a methylation mechanism. | 1987 | 24276903 |
| 287 | 7 | 0.9968 | Reversion of mutations in the thymidine kinase gene in herpes simplex viruses resistant to phosphonoacetate. Mutations in the DNA polymerase locus of phage, bacteria, and eukaryotic may change the mutation rates at other loci of the genome. We used resistance to phosphonoacetate to select mutants of herpes simplex virus with mutated DNA polymerase and then determined the reversion frequency of viral thymidine kinase mutation in mutants and recombinants. The results obtained indicate that mutations causing resistance to phosphonoacetate do not affect the mutation rate of the viral genes. This finding is consistent with the existence of two functional regions in the DNA polymerase molecule, one involving the pyrophosphate acceptor site and responsible for resistance to phosphonoacetate and another involved in the editing ability and recognition specificity of the enzyme. | 1984 | 6331620 |
| 264 | 8 | 0.9967 | The Tn5 bleomycin resistance gene confers improved survival and growth advantage on Escherichia coli. The bleomycin resistance gene (ble) of transposon Tn5 is known to decrease the death rate of Escherichia coli during stationary phase. Bleomycin is a DNA-damaging agent and bleomycin resistance is produced by improved DNA repair which also requires the host genes aidC and polA coding, respectively, for an alkylation-inducible gene product and DNA polymerase I. In the absence of the drug, this DNA repair system is believed to cause the slower death rate of bleomycin-resistant bacteria. In this study, the effect of ble and aidC genes on the viability of bacteria and their growth rate in chemostat competitions was studied. The results indicate, that bleomycin-resistant bacteria display greater fitness under these conditions. Another beneficial effect of transposon Tn5 had been previously attributed to the insertion sequence IS 50 R. We were not able to reproduce this result with IS 50 R, however, the complete transposon was beneficial under similar conditions. Moreover, we showed the Tn5 fitness effect to be aidC-dependent. The ble gene was discovered after the fitness effect of IS 50 R had been established; it has not previously been considered to mediate the beneficial effect of Tn5. This possibility is discussed based on the molecular mechanism of bleomycin resistance. | 1994 | 7510018 |
| 437 | 9 | 0.9967 | Cloning of genes responsible for acetic acid resistance in Acetobacter aceti. Five acetic acid-sensitive mutants of Acetobacter aceti subsp. aceti no. 1023 were isolated by mutagenesis with N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine. Three recombinant plasmids that complemented the mutations were isolated from a gene bank of the chromosome DNA of the parental strain constructed in Escherichia coli by using cosmid vector pMVC1. One of these plasmids (pAR1611), carrying about a 30-kilobase-pair (kb) fragment that conferred acetic acid resistance to all five mutants, was further analyzed. Subcloning experiments indicated that a 8.3-kb fragment was sufficient to complement all five mutations. To identify the mutation loci and genes involved in acetic acid resistance, insertional inactivation was performed by insertion of the kanamycin resistance gene derived from E. coli plasmid pACYC177 into the cloned 8.3-kb fragment and successive integration into the chromosome of the parental strain. The results suggested that three genes, designated aarA, aarB, and aarC, were responsible for expression of acetic acid resistance. Gene products of these genes were detected by means of overproduction in E. coli by use of the lac promoter. The amino acid sequence of the aarA gene product deduced from the nucleotide sequence was significantly similar to those of the citrate synthases (CSs) of E. coli and other bacteria. The A. aceti mutants defective in the aarA gene were found to lack CS activity, which was restored by introduction of a plasmid containing the aarA gene. A mutation in the CS gene of E. coli was also complemented by the aarA gene. These results indicate that aarA is the CS gene. | 1990 | 2156811 |
| 315 | 10 | 0.9967 | Phosphorothioate DNA as an antioxidant in bacteria. Diverse bacteria contain DNA with sulfur incorporated stereo-specifically into their DNA backbone at specific sequences (phosphorothioation). We found that in vitro oxidation of phosphorothioate (PT) DNA by hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) or peracetic acid has two possible outcomes: DNA backbone cleavage or sulfur removal resulting in restoration of normal DNA backbone. The physiological relevance of this redox reaction was investigated by challenging PT DNA hosting Salmonella enterica cells using H(2)O(2). DNA phosphorothioation was found to correlate with increasing resistance to the growth inhibition by H(2)O(2). Resistance to H(2)O(2) was abolished when each of the three dnd genes, required for phosphorothioation, was inactivated. In vivo, PT DNA is more resistant to the double-strand break damage caused by H(2)O(2) than PT-free DNA. Furthermore, sulfur on the modified DNA was consumed and the DNA was converted to PT-free state when the bacteria were incubated with H(2)O(2). These findings are consistent with a hypothesis that phosphorothioation modification endows DNA with reducing chemical property, which protects the hosting bacteria against peroxide, explaining why this modification is maintained by diverse bacteria. | 2012 | 22772986 |
| 449 | 11 | 0.9967 | Oxygen-insensitive nitroreductases: analysis of the roles of nfsA and nfsB in development of resistance to 5-nitrofuran derivatives in Escherichia coli. Nitroheterocyclic and nitroaromatic compounds constitute an enormous range of chemicals whose potent biological activity has significant human health and environmental implications. The biological activity of nitro-substituted compounds is derived from reductive metabolism of the nitro moiety, a process catalyzed by a variety of nitroreductase activities. Resistance of bacteria to nitro-substituted compounds is believed to result primarily from mutations in genes encoding oxygen-insensitive nitroreductases. We have characterized the nfsA and nfsB genes of a large number of nitrofuran-resistant mutants of Escherichia coli and have correlated mutation with cell extract nitroreductase activity. Our studies demonstrate that first-step resistance to furazolidone or nitrofurazone results from an nfsA mutation, while the increased resistance associated with second-step mutants is a consequence of an nfsB mutation. Inferences made from mutation about the structure-function relationships of NfsA and NfsB are discussed, especially with regard to the identification of flavin mononucleotide binding sites. We show that expression of plasmid-carried nfsA and nfsB genes in resistant mutants restores sensitivity to nitrofurans. Among the 20 first-step and 53 second-step mutants isolated in this study, 65 and 49%, respectively, contained insertion sequence elements in nfsA and nfsB. IS1 integrated in both genes, while IS30 and IS186 were found only in nfsA and IS2 and IS5 were observed only in nfsB. Insertion hot spots for IS30 and IS186 are indicated in nfsA, and a hot spot for IS5 insertion is evident in nfsB. We discuss potential regional and sequence-specific determinants for insertion sequence element integration in nfsA and nfsB. | 1998 | 9791100 |
| 387 | 12 | 0.9967 | Expression of tetracycline resistance in pBR322 derivatives reduces the reproductive fitness of plasmid-containing Escherichia coli. Plasmid pBR322 and its numerous derivatives are used extensively for research and in biotechnology. The tetracycline-resistance (TcR) genes in these plasmids are expressed constitutively and cells carrying these plasmids are resistant to tetracycline. We have shown that expression of the TcR gene has an adverse effect on the reproductive fitness of plasmid-containing bacteria in both glucose-limited batch and chemostat cultures. If the TcR genes are inactivated at any one of three different restriction sites, mixed cultures of plasmid-free and plasmid-containing bacteria grow at the same rate. | 1985 | 3005111 |
| 371 | 13 | 0.9967 | Single amino acid substitutions in the enzyme acetolactate synthase confer resistance to the herbicide sulfometuron methyl. Sulfometuron methyl, a sulfonylurea herbicide, blocks growth of bacteria, yeast, and higher plants by inhibition of acetolactate synthase (EC 4.1.3.18), the first common enzyme in the biosynthesis of branched-chain amino acids. Spontaneous mutations that confer increased resistance to the herbicide were obtained in cloned genes for acetolactate synthase from Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The DNA sequence of a bacterial mutant gene and a yeast mutant gene revealed single nucleotide differences from their respective wild-type genes. The mutations result in single amino acid substitutions in the structurally homologous aminoterminal regions of the two proteins, but at different positions. The bacterial mutation results in reduced levels of acetolactate synthase activity, reduced sensitivity to sulfometuron methyl, and unaltered resistance to feedback inhibition by valine. The yeast mutation results in unaltered levels of acetolactate synthase activity, greatly reduced sensitivity to sulfometuron methyl, and slightly reduced sensitivity to valine. | 1986 | 16593715 |
| 432 | 14 | 0.9967 | Repressor gene finO in plasmids R100 and F: constitutive transfer of plasmid F is caused by insertion of IS3 into F finO. Fertility factor F confers bacterial conjugation, a process which involves at least 20 tra genes. Resistance plasmids such as R100, R6-5, and R1 have homology with F in the tra region. Conjugal transfer of these plasmids is, however, repressed, while transfer of F is constitutive. Repression of R transfer is due to the existence of the two genes, called finO and finP; constitutive transfer of F is believed to be due to a lack of finO in F. In this paper, we report the identification and DNA sequence of the finO gene of R100, encoding a protein of 21,265 daltons. We show that F does actually encode finO, but the gene has been inactivated by insertion of IS3. Lederberg and Tatum (Nature [London] 158:558, 1946), who discovered sexuality in bacteria, may have had an Escherichia coli K-12 strain harboring such an finO F factor, which facilitated the generation of recombinant progeny useful for genetic analysis of bacteria and established the foundation for molecular genetics. | 1987 | 3027040 |
| 6232 | 15 | 0.9966 | Genetic manipulation of the restricted facultative methylotroph Hyphomicrobium X by the R-plasmid-mediated introduction of the Escherichia coli pdh genes. The inability of Hyphomicrobium X to grow on compounds such as pyruvate and succinate is most likely due to the absence of a functional pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex. Further support for this was sought by studying the effect of the introduction of the Escherichia coli pdh genes in Hyphomicrobium X on the pattern of substrate utilization by the latter organism. These genes were cloned by in vivo techniques using the broad-host range conjugative plasmid RP4::Mucts. Plasmid RP4 derivatives containing pdh genes were selected by their ability to complement a pyruvate dehydrogenase deletion mutant of E. coli, strain JRG746 recA (ace-1pd) delta 18. The plasmids thus obtained could be transferred through an intermediary host (C600 recA), selecting only for an antibiotic resistance coded for by RP4 and back into JRG746 or other E. coli pdh mutants, upon which they still conferred the wild type phenotype. Enzyme assays showed that the latter strains, when carrying plasmid RP4'pdh1 also possessed PDH complex activity. Conjugation between the auxotrophic E. coli JRG746 (RP4'pdh1) strain and Hyphomicrobium X on pyruvate minimal agar gave rise to progeny which, on the basis of its morphology (stalked bacteria), their ability to grow on C1-compounds and to denitrify (now also with pyruvate) were identified as hyphomicrobia. This Hyphomicrobium X transconjugant was also able to grow in minimal medium with succinate, but no other novel growth substrates have been identified so far.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) | 1984 | 6393893 |
| 286 | 16 | 0.9966 | Plasmid rescue - a tool for reproducible recovery of genes from transfected mammalian cells? The efficient rescue of plasmids containing the thymidine kinase gene (tk) of Herpes simplex virus type I from genetically transformed mouse cells by transformation of bacteria is described. Rescued plasmids contain insertions of calf DNA used as a carrier in the transfection but usually lack portions of plasmid DNA. Deletions generally concern the region spanning from around the PvuII site of pBR322 to within the tetracycline resistance coding sequence, whereas the extent of tk sequence deletion varies, depending on the site of its integration (BamHI or PvuII) into the plasmid. Modelling the rescue process by transformation of bacteria with a mixture of original plasmids and sheared mouse cell DNA clearly demonstrates that deletions are caused by the presence of the mammalian DNA and they probably occur during re-transformation of bacteria before the onset of tetracycline gene expression. Plasmids lacking the Tcr region are reproducibly rescuable without deletion. Methods for reproducible re-isolation of transferred genes from mammalian cells are discussed. | 1984 | 6323922 |
| 386 | 17 | 0.9966 | A mutant neomycin phosphotransferase II gene reduces the resistance of transformants to antibiotic selection pressure. The neo (neomycin-resistance) gene of transposon Tn5 encodes the enzyme neomycin phosphotransferase II (EC 2.7.1.95), which confers resistance to various aminoglycoside antibiotics, including kanamycin and G418. The gene is widely used as a selectable marker in the transformation of organisms as diverse as bacteria, yeast, plants, and animals. We found a mutation that involves a glutamic to aspartic acid conversion at residue 182 in the protein encoded by the chimeric neomycin phosphotransferase II genes of several commonly used transformation vectors. The mutation substantially reduces phosphotransferase activity but does not appear to affect the stability of the neomycin phosphotransferase II mRNA or protein. Plants and bacteria transformed with the mutant gene are less resistant to antibiotics than those transformed with the normal gene. A simple restriction endonuclease digestion distinguishes between the mutant and the normal gene. | 1990 | 2159150 |
| 390 | 18 | 0.9966 | A new simple method for introducing an unmarked mutation into a large gene of non-competent Gram-negative bacteria by FLP/FRT recombination. BACKGROUND: For the disruption of a target gene in molecular microbiology, unmarked mutagenesis is preferable to marked mutagenesis because the former method raises no concern about the polar effect and leaves no selection marker. In contrast to naturally competent bacteria, there is no useful method for introducing an unmarked mutation into a large gene of non-competent bacteria. Nevertheless, large genes encoding huge proteins exist in diverse bacteria and are interesting and important for physiology and potential applications. Here we present a new method for introducing an unmarked mutation into such large genes of non-competent Gram-negative bacteria. RESULTS: Two gene replacement plasmids, pJQFRT and pKFRT/FLP, were constructed to apply the FLP/FRT recombination system to introduce an unmarked mutation into a large gene of non-competent Gram-negative bacteria. In our methodology, pJQFRT and pKFRT/FLP are integrated into the upstream and the downstream regions of a target gene, respectively, through homologous recombination. The resultant mutant has antibiotic resistance markers, the sacB counter-selection marker, flp recombinase under the control of the tetR regulator, and identical FRT sites sandwiching the target gene and the markers on its chromosome. By inducing the expression of flp recombinase, the target gene is completely deleted together with the other genes derived from the integrated plasmids, resulting in the generation of an unmarked mutation. By this method, we constructed an unmarked mutant of ataA, which encodes the huge trimeric autotransporter adhesin (3,630 aa), in a non-competent Gram-negative bacterium, Acinetobacter sp. Tol 5. The unmarked ataA mutant showed the same growth rate as wild type Tol 5, but lost the adhesive properties of Tol 5, similar to the transposon-inserted mutant of ataA that we generated previously. CONCLUSIONS: The feasibility of our methodology was evidenced by the construction of an unmarked ataA mutant in the Tol 5 strain. Since FLP/FRT recombination can excise a long region of DNA exceeding 100 kb, our method has the potential to selectively disrupt much larger genes or longer regions of gene clusters than ataA. Our methodology allows the straightforward and efficient introduction of an unmarked mutation into a large gene or gene cluster of non-enterobacterial Gram-negative bacteria. | 2013 | 23594401 |
| 388 | 19 | 0.9966 | Improved bacterial hosts for regulated expression of genes from lambda pL plasmid vectors. The construction and use of a set of Escherichia coli strains with defective lambda prophages that facilitate expression of genes cloned in lambda pL-plasmid vectors is described. These bacteria allow high and regulated expression of such genes, whereas a kanamycin-resistance marker (KmR) on the prophage allows easy identification and genetic transfer from strain to strain. Optimal conditions for examining gene expression with the pL-vector systems using these strains are discussed. | 1993 | 8406046 |