Difference between revisions of "Team:Bielefeld-CeBiTec/Project/Mutation/Global"

 
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<div class="container text_header"><h3>Abstract</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text_header"><h3>Abstract</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text">
 
<div class="container text">
Organism ensure the fidelity of their DNA by three overlapping pathways namely base selection, proofreading and mismatch repair.  
+
Organisms ensure the fidelity of their DNA by three overlapping pathways namely base selection, proofreading and mismatch repair.  
These pathways cumulate in replication fidelity of ~10<sup>-10</sup> mutations per bp per generation in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>.  
+
These pathways cumulate in replication fidelity of ~10<sup>-10</sup> mutations per bp per generation in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> (Lee et al. 2012).  
By modulating the expression or activity of different genes participating in these fidelity mechanisms respectively expressing
+
Overexpression of dominant negative variants of major players in this system can increase the mutation rate substantially. Recently,  
dominant negative variants the mutation rate can be increased substantial. Recently, mutation rates up to 6.2&times;10<sup>-6</sup>  
+
mutation rates up to 6.2&times;10<sup>-6</sup> mutations per bp and per generation were obtained by using a plasmid-borne mutator system  
mutations per bp per generation were obtained by using a plasmid-borne mutator system. (Badran, Liu 2015) We aim to make this mutator  
+
(Badran, Liu 2015). We aim to make this mutator plasmid available for the whole iGEM community by rebuilding it with defined iGEM parts  
plasmid available for the iGEM community by rebuilding it with defined iGEM parts  
+
 
(see our <a href="http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K2082117">BBa_K208117</a>). We envision an application in the  
 
(see our <a href="http://parts.igem.org/wiki/index.php?title=Part:BBa_K2082117">BBa_K208117</a>). We envision an application in the  
directed evolution of our binding protein. Furthermore implementation in other directed evolution approaches could be feasibly  
+
directed evolution of our binding protein. Furthermore, implementation in other directed evolution approaches could be feasibly  
in which our plasmid pose an alternative to error-prone PCR (Wilson, Keefe 2001) or exogene mutagens (reviewed in Steensels et al. 2014; Wong et al. 2006).<br>
+
in which our plasmid pose an <i>in&nbsp;vivo</i> alternative to error-prone PCR (Wilson, Keefe 2001) or exogene mutagens (reviewed in Wong et al. 2006; Steensels et al. 2014).<br>
 
</div>
 
</div>
<div class="container text_header"><h3>Maintenance of DNA fidelity and creating <i>in vivo</i> mutagenesis by affecting the participarting proteins</h3></div>
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<div class="container text_header"><h3>Maintenance of DNA fidelity and creating <i>in&nbsp;vivo</i> mutagenesis by affecting the participating proteins</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text">  
 
<div class="container text">  
 
DNA is the single blueprint for all proteins of an organism. Minor changes in the DNA sequence are mostly without significant consequences,  
 
DNA is the single blueprint for all proteins of an organism. Minor changes in the DNA sequence are mostly without significant consequences,  
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The first fidelity mechanism lies in selecting the correct base for incorporation during replication of DNA. This process of base selection  
 
The first fidelity mechanism lies in selecting the correct base for incorporation during replication of DNA. This process of base selection  
 
reduces the error rate by 10<sup>5</sup> mutations per bp per generation. During replication, the acting polymerase (mainly polymerase III in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>)  
 
reduces the error rate by 10<sup>5</sup> mutations per bp per generation. During replication, the acting polymerase (mainly polymerase III in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>)  
directly corrects falsely incorporated bases. This process is called proofreading and reduces the error rate by 10<sup>2</sup> mutations/bp/generation.  
+
directly corrects falsely incorporated bases. This process is called proofreading and reduces the error rate by 10<sup>2</sup> mutations per bp per generation.  
Other mutations in the DNA e.g. created through replication errors or other mutagenic sources are repaired by the mismatch repair systems.  
+
Other mutations in the DNA e.g. introduced through replication errors or other mutagenic sources are repaired by the mismatch repair systems.  
 
This system reduces the error rate by 10<sup>3</sup> mutations per bp per generation. (Schaaper 1993; Fijalkowska et al. 2012)  All these fidelity  
 
This system reduces the error rate by 10<sup>3</sup> mutations per bp per generation. (Schaaper 1993; Fijalkowska et al. 2012)  All these fidelity  
mechanisms contributed to the error rate reduction to about 10<sup>-10</sup> mutations per bp per generation. (Lee et al. 2012).<br>
+
mechanisms contributed to the error rate reduction, leading to a final rate of about 10<sup>-10</sup> mutations per bp per generation. (Lee et al. 2012).
+
<br>
 
Many variants of the participating proteins with (partial) loss-of-function were identified and described in the literature  
 
Many variants of the participating proteins with (partial) loss-of-function were identified and described in the literature  
(Schaaper, Radman 1989; Degnen, Cox 1974; Junop et al. 2003; Fowler, Schaaper 1997; Nghiem et al. 1988). The common phenotype upon the  
+
(Degnen, Cox 1974; Nghiem et al. 1988; Schaaper, Radman 1989; Fowler, Schaaper 1997; Junop et al. 2003). The common phenotype upon the  
mutants was a strongly increased mutation rate. It did not take long before better-characterised hypermutator strains arised as a tool to study  
+
mutants was a strongly increased mutation rate. It did not take long before better-characterized hypermutator strains arose as a tool to study  
 
the effect of random mutations on proteins or to improve proteins trough means of directed evolution  
 
the effect of random mutations on proteins or to improve proteins trough means of directed evolution  
 
(Greener et al. 1997; Selifonova et al. 2001; Stefan et al. 2001). A common issue among  different applications of genomic mutator genes is the  
 
(Greener et al. 1997; Selifonova et al. 2001; Stefan et al. 2001). A common issue among  different applications of genomic mutator genes is the  
 
general genetic instability and frequent unviability of these strains. For example, the  <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> strain, which chromosomally harbors  
 
general genetic instability and frequent unviability of these strains. For example, the  <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> strain, which chromosomally harbors  
the strongest known mutator dnaQ926 is almost completely unviable without supporting mutations (Fijalkowska, Schaaper 1996)).
+
the strongest known mutator <i>dnaQ926</i> is almost completely unviable without additional mutations (Fijalkowska, Schaaper 1996).
Therefore, recent development was directed to the rational design of a plasmid-borne mutator system. By combining the strongest mutator capabilities with a  
+
Therefore, recent development was directed to the rational design of a plasmid-borne mutator system. Combination of strong mutator capabilities with a  
 
tight inducible promoter should result in a controllable mutagenesis system, generally circumventing many issues of chromosome-based hypermutator strains.  
 
tight inducible promoter should result in a controllable mutagenesis system, generally circumventing many issues of chromosome-based hypermutator strains.  
Furthermore, the rational combination of different groups of mutator genes enables combinations, which have a very <a href="#">balanced mutagenesis spectra</a> <br>
+
Furthermore, the rational combination of different groups of mutator genes enables compositions, which have a very <a href="#">balanced mutagenesis spectra</a>  
Our mutation system was designed to use an untargeted mutation approach as an alternative to the error-prone polymerase I. Therefore, we tried to reconstruct
+
<br>
the previously described mutator plasmid (Badran, Liu 2015), which consists of six different gene.  
+
Our mutation system was designed to use an untargeted mutation approach as an alternative to the error-prone polymerase I. Therefore, we reconstructed
 +
the previously described mutator plasmid (Badran, Liu 2015), which consists of six different genes.  
 
<figure class="figure">
 
<figure class="figure">
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/6/6f/Bielefeld_CeBiTec_2016_10_15_mutation_M6_complete.png" class="figure-img" />
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<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/6/6f/Bielefeld_CeBiTec_2016_10_15_mutation_M6_complete.png" class="figure-img" /> </center>
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
Figure 1: Mutation spectrum of the mutagenesis plasmid developed by Badran and coworkers. (Badran, Liu 2015)
+
<b>Figure 1: Schematic view of the mutator genes on a plasmid developed by Badran and coworkers (Badran, Liu 2015).</b> This mutator plasmid uses six 
 +
genes under tight control through an arabinose promoter. The different DNA fidelity mechanisms affected by the genes are indicated by coloring.
 
</figcaption>
 
</figcaption>
 
</figure>
 
</figure>
 
Overexpression of these mutator genes rises the mutation  
 
Overexpression of these mutator genes rises the mutation  
frequency in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> to 6.2&times;10<sup>-6</sup> per bp per generation with induction and only ~4&times;10<sup>-9</sup> per bp per generation without induction, respectively with a diverese mutation spectrum.  
+
frequency in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> to 6.2&times;10<sup>-6</sup> per bp per generation with induction and only ~4&times;10<sup>-9</sup> per bp per generation without induction.
 +
Moreover, the mutation spectrum is very diverse.
 +
 
<figure class="figure">
 
<figure class="figure">
Tabelle mit dem Mutationsspektrum
+
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/7/75/Bielefeld_CeBiTec_2016_10_15_mutation_SpectrumBadran.png" class="figure-img" width=50% /> </center>
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
Figure 2: Mutation spectrum of the mutagenesis plasmid developed by Badran and coworkers. (Badran, Liu 2015)
+
<b>Figure 2: Mutation spectrum of the mutagenesis plasmid developed by Badran and coworkers (Badran and Liu 2015).</b>
 
</figcaption>
 
</figcaption>
 
</figure>
 
</figure>
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of this enzyme. DnaQ confers  3&apos;-exonuclease activity, which excises falsely incorporated bases during replication. DnaQ926 contains two amino  
 
of this enzyme. DnaQ confers  3&apos;-exonuclease activity, which excises falsely incorporated bases during replication. DnaQ926 contains two amino  
 
acid substitutions  (D12A, E14A) in the Exo I region, which prevents coordination of an essential metal ion and therefore abolishes the  
 
acid substitutions  (D12A, E14A) in the Exo I region, which prevents coordination of an essential metal ion and therefore abolishes the  
proofreading activity(Fijalkowska, Schaaper 1996). The overall structure of DnaQ and  interactions with other proteins of the DNA polymerase III  
+
proofreading activity (Fijalkowska, Schaaper 1996). The overall structure of DnaQ and  interactions with other proteins of the DNA polymerase III  
 
complex are not affected by these substitutions. <i>dnaQ926</i> acts as a dominant negative gene causing a strong mutator phenotype even in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>  
 
complex are not affected by these substitutions. <i>dnaQ926</i> acts as a dominant negative gene causing a strong mutator phenotype even in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>  
 
strains with chromosomal wild type <i>dnaQ</i> (Cox, Horner 1986). DnaQ926 competes against DnaQ about incorporation into the DNA polymerase  
 
strains with chromosomal wild type <i>dnaQ</i> (Cox, Horner 1986). DnaQ926 competes against DnaQ about incorporation into the DNA polymerase  
III complex. Incorporation of DnaQ926 leads to proofreading deficient replication complexes. Therefore, overexpression or plasmid-borne expression  
+
III complex. Incorporation of DnaQ926 leads to proofreading deficient replication complexes. Therefore, overexpression or plasmid-based expression  
of dnaQ926 is supposed to yield a increased mutation effect. Another side effect of dnaQ926 is, that the <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> mismatch repair system is
+
of <i>dnaQ926</i> is supposed to yield an increased mutation effect. The huge  amount of mutations introduced by <i>dnaQ926</i>  overwhelms the <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>  
overwhelmed by the large amount of errors introduced by the defective polymerase III complexes. The saturation of this repair mechanism greatly
+
mismatch repair system leading to the manifestation of mutations from various sources (Schaaper, Radman 1989; Damagnez et al. 1989) <br>
decreases it’s effectivity and prevents repair of various mutations. (Schaaper, Radman 1989; Damagnez et al. 1989) <br>
+
The exact rate and mutagenesis spectrum of DnaQ926 depends on the used cultivation media. Rich media leads high mutation frequency (3.7&times;10<sup>4</sup>  
The exact rate and mutagenesis spectrum of DnaQ926 differs between the used media. Rich media yield high mutation frequency (3.7&times;10<sup>4</sup>  
+
 
over background) with mostly transitions, while minimal media cause less mutations (4.8&times;10<sup>2</sup> over background) and mostly transversions  
 
over background) with mostly transitions, while minimal media cause less mutations (4.8&times;10<sup>2</sup> over background) and mostly transversions  
 
(mainly AT &rarr; TA). The faster growth of bacteria in rich media decreases the time the time to remove errors before cell division via the repair  
 
(mainly AT &rarr; TA). The faster growth of bacteria in rich media decreases the time the time to remove errors before cell division via the repair  
mechanisms. (Schaaper 1988)
+
mechanisms (Schaaper 1988).
</div>
+
 
<figure class="figure">
 
<figure class="figure">
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/a/a8/Bielefeld_CeBiTec_2016_10_15_mutation_dnaQ-structure.jpg" class="figure-img />
+
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/a/a8/Bielefeld_CeBiTec_2016_10_15_mutation_dnaQ-structure.jpg" class="figure-img" width=50% /> </center>
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
Figure 3: Structure of DnaQ with indicated mutation sites. In DnaQ926 the acidic amino acids D12A, E14A (red) are changed to alanine.
+
<b>Figure 3: Structure of DnaQ with indicated mutation sites.</b> In DnaQ926 the acidic amino acids D12A, E14A (red) are changed to alanine.
 
Thereby complexation of the function-essential manganese ion (grey) is abolished due to missing negative charges at the amino acid residues.  
 
Thereby complexation of the function-essential manganese ion (grey) is abolished due to missing negative charges at the amino acid residues.  
 
(PDB: 2IDO) (Kirby et al. 2006)
 
(PDB: 2IDO) (Kirby et al. 2006)
 
</figcaption>
 
</figcaption>
 
</figure>
 
</figure>
<div class="container text_header"><h3>DNA adenine methylase (Dam) and the SeqA</h3></div>
+
</div>
 +
<div class="container text_header"><h3>DNA adenine methylase (Dam) and SeqA</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text">  
 
<div class="container text">  
coming soon
+
A mechanism of mismatch repair is the Dam-directed mismatch repair (DDMR). Parental and daughter DNA strands are modified
 +
by methylation at GATC sites. These methylations are added after replication by the DNA adenine methylase (Dam). In the timeframe
 +
between daughter strand synthesis and Dam methylation the repair mechanisms can distinguish between the correct base on the methylated
 +
parent strand (template) and the falsely incorporated base on the non-methylated daughter strand (product). This modification
 +
is used by the mismatch repair proteins MutS, MutL and MutH, which repair the daughter strand relying on information from the
 +
parent strand (Horst et al. 1999).
 +
<br>
 +
SeqA is a GATC-binding protein, which also controls the methylation state of DNA. It counteracts Dam by demethylating DNA. This results
 +
in hypomethylated DNA on both strands, which further decreases the efficiency of DNA mismatch repair (Yang et al. 2004).
 +
<br>
 +
Combined overexpression of <i>dam</i> and <i>seqA</i> strongly shifts the methylation state of the DNA. Methylation of the parental strand by SeqA
 +
is reduced while the methylation of the daughter strand via Dam is increased. Both effects abrogate the methylation difference between
 +
parental and daughter strand and prevent effective mismatch repair.
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="container text_header"><h3>EmrR</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text_header"><h3>EmrR</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text">  
 
<div class="container text">  
As mentioned before the main factor of replication fidelity is the correct base incorporation during replication.  
+
As mentioned before, the main factor of replication fidelity is the correct base incorporation during replication.  
 
This is mainly dependent on the &alpha;-subunit of DNA polymerase III, but the intracellular concentrations of the  
 
This is mainly dependent on the &alpha;-subunit of DNA polymerase III, but the intracellular concentrations of the  
single nucleotidetriphosphates are important too (ref?). A strong imbalance between the single nucleotide-triphosphates  
+
single nucleotidetriphosphates are important too (ref?). A strong imbalance between the single nucleotide-triphosphates or
or a high concentration of base analogs can increases the rate of incorporation of a wrong base (Gon et al. 2011). <br>
+
a high concentration of base analogs can increase the rate of erroneous base incorporation (Gon et al. 2011).  
One possible way to achieve this imbalance is the overexpression of <i>emrR</i>. EmrR is a transcriptional repressor of
+
<br>
the <i>emrAB</i> operon. This operon encodes an efflux pump, which is linked to multidrug resistance (Lomovskaya et al. 1995).  
+
This metabolic imbalance is achieved by the overexpression of <i>emrR</i>. The transcription repressor EmrR reduces the
However, the native function of EmrAB is the export of intermediates of the purine and pyrimidine biosynthesis and metabolism.  
+
expression of the repressor of the <i>emrAB</i> operon. This operon encodes an efflux pump, which is linked to multidrug resistance (Lomovskaya et al. 1995).  
 +
However, the native function of EmrAB is the export of intermediates of the purine and pyrimidine metabolism.  
 
An overexpression of <i>emrR</i> reduces the concentration of EmrA and EmrB leading to increased concentration of nucleotide  
 
An overexpression of <i>emrR</i> reduces the concentration of EmrA and EmrB leading to increased concentration of nucleotide  
precursors inside the cell. At these higher concentrations, these nucleotide precursors can act as base analogs. Mutations are  
+
precursors inside the cell. At high concentrations, these nucleotide precursors can act as base analogs. Mutations are  
caused either by the incorporated nucleotide precursor or via error prone repair mechanisms.(Gabrovsky et al. 2005)
+
caused either incorporation of the nucleotide precursor or by failure during the repair attempt of an erroneous base incorporation(Gabrovsky et al. 2005).
 
+
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
<div class="container text_header"><h3>Uracil glycosylase inhibitor and <i>Pteromyzon marinus</i> cytidin deaminase 1</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text_header"><h3>Uracil glycosylase inhibitor and <i>Pteromyzon marinus</i> cytidin deaminase 1</h3></div>
 
<div class="container text">  
 
<div class="container text">  
Cytidin deaminases (cda) are DNA editing enzymes in eukaryotes, which have multiple functions like the generation of antibody diversity,  
+
Cytidin deaminases (<i>cda</i>) are DNA editing enzymes in eukaryotes, which have multiple functions like the generation of antibody diversity,  
 
defence against retroviruses and demethylation during development (Lada et al. 2011). <br>
 
defence against retroviruses and demethylation during development (Lada et al. 2011). <br>
The main activity of Cdas is the deamination from cytidin to uracil in CG base pairs. The resulting UG base pairs split in replication  
+
The main activity of CDAs is the deamination from cytidin to uracil in CG base pairs. The resulting UG base pairs split in replication  
in one CG and one UA basepair. Therefore, the main mutations created by Cdas are C &rarr; T transitions. <br>
+
in one CG and one UA basepair. Therefore, the main mutations created by CDAs are C &rarr; T transitions. <br>
 
<figure class="figure">
 
<figure class="figure">
+
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/2/27/Bielefeld_CeBiTec_2016_10_15_mutation_ung_pathway.png" class="figure-img" width=100% /> </center>
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
 
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
Figure: Desamination of cytidin by cytidin deasminases and possible resulting mutations by replication of base excision repair (BER).  
+
<b>Figure 4: Deamination of cytidin by cytidin deasminases and possible resulting mutations by replication of base excision repair (BER).</b>
Cytidin deaminase (CDA deaminases cytidin to uracil. The resulting GU base pair leads to a UA and a CG base pair in replication.  
+
Cytidin deaminase (CDA) deaminases cytidin to uracil. The resulting GU base pair leads to a UA and a CG base pair during replication.  
 
Alternatively, the uracil is repaired via the base excision repair. Thereby, uracil-DNA-glycosylase (UNG) cuts out uracil and the  
 
Alternatively, the uracil is repaired via the base excision repair. Thereby, uracil-DNA-glycosylase (UNG) cuts out uracil and the  
 
abasic site (AP-site) inside the DNA gets repaired by specialized endonucleases and polymerases.
 
abasic site (AP-site) inside the DNA gets repaired by specialized endonucleases and polymerases.
Line 115: Line 137:
 
</figure>
 
</figure>
 
Organisms have created mechanism to repair mismatches as UG pairs via the base excision repair (BER). Thereby the mismatched base is  
 
Organisms have created mechanism to repair mismatches as UG pairs via the base excision repair (BER). Thereby the mismatched base is  
cut out by the uracil-DNA-glycosylase (Ung). The resulting abasic site (AP-site) is cleaved by an AP-endonuclease and the patch is filled  
+
cut out by the uracil-DNA-glycosylase (UNG). The resulting abasic site (AP-site) is cleaved by an AP-endonuclease and the patch is filled  
by a variety of specialised proteins (Krokan, Bjoras 2013). <br>
+
by a variety of specialized proteins (Krokan, Bjoras 2013). <br>
Overexpression of eukaryotic cytidin deaminase increases the mutation rate in bacteria. The Cda1 of <i>Pteromyzon marinus</i> was identified  
+
Overexpression of eukaryotic cytidin deaminase increases the mutation rate in bacteria. The CDA1 of <i>Pteromyzon marinus</i> was identified  
 
in a comprehensive screen as the most potent cytidin deaminase when expressed in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>. Overexpression of <i>P. marinus</i> <i>cda1</i>  
 
in a comprehensive screen as the most potent cytidin deaminase when expressed in <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i>. Overexpression of <i>P. marinus</i> <i>cda1</i>  
increases the mutation rate to 10<sup>-6</sup>-10</sup>-5</sup> /bp. In <i>ung</i> deficient strains the effect was amplified by a factor of 10<sup>?</sup>
+
increases the mutation rate to 10<sup>-6</sup>-10<sup>-5</sup> per bp. In <i>ung</i> deficient strains the effect was amplified by a factor of 50
due to the lack of UNG induced BER (Lada et al. 2011). <br>
+
due to the lack of UNG induced BER (Lada et al. 2011).  
The CDS of <i>P. marinus</i> <i>cda1</i> was codon optimized for <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> integrated into our mutagenesis plasmid to increase the expression.
+
Moreover,  the uracil-DNA-glycosylase inhibitor (<i>ugi</i>) was added. This short protein mimics the structure of abasic sides, binds to UNG and inhibits
+
the UNG mediated BER pathway.  
+
 
<br>
 
<br>
 +
The CDS of <i>P.&nbsp;marinus</i> <i>cda1</i> was codon optimized for <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> integrated into our mutagenesis plasmid to increase the expression.
 +
Moreover, the uracil-DNA-glycosylase inhibitor (<i>ugi</i>) was added. This short protein mimics the structure of abasic sides, binds to UNG and inhibits
 +
the UNG mediated BER pathway (Serrano-Heras et al. 2007).
 +
<br>
 +
<figure class="figure">
 +
<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/4/44/Bielefeld_CeBiTec_2016_10_15_mutation_UNGUGIDNA.png" class="figure-img" width=50% /> </center>
 +
<figcaption class="figure-caption">
 +
<b>Figure 5: Structural alignment of UNG-UGI and UNG-DNA complexes.</b> The <i>E.&nbsp;coli</i> UNG-UGI complex (PDB: 1LQG) was aligned to
 +
<i>Deinococcus radiodurans</i> UNG-DNA complex (PDB: 4UQM). The structural mimicry of UGI (red) to DNA with an abasic side (blue) and
 +
the binding to UNG (green) is highlighted.
 +
</figcaption>
 +
</figure>
 +
See here how we characterized our genome wide mutator by <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Bielefeld-CeBiTec/Results/Mutation/Reversion">reversion assays</a> and <a href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Bielefeld-CeBiTec/Results/Mutation/Sequencing">high-throughput sequencing</a>
 +
<br>
 +
<br>
 +
<center>
 +
<a class= "button_link" href="https://2016.igem.org/Team:Bielefeld-CeBiTec/Results/Mutation" role="button"><button>Results</button></a>
 +
</center>
 +
</div>
 +
<div class="container text_header"><h3>References</h3></div>
 +
<div class="container text">
 +
<ul>
 +
<li>Badran, Ahmed H.; Liu, David R. (2015): Development of potent in vivo mutagenesis plasmids with broad mutational spectra. In Nature communications 6, p. 8425. DOI: 10.1038/ncomms9425.
 +
<li>Cox, E. C.; Horner, D. L. (1986): DNA sequence and coding properties of mutD(dnaQ) a dominant Escherichia coli mutator gene. In Journal of molecular biology 190 (1), pp. 113–117.
 +
<li>Damagnez, V.; Doutriaux, M. P.; Radman, M. (1989): Saturation of mismatch repair in the mutD5 mutator strain of Escherichia coli. In Journal of bacteriology 171 (8), pp. 4494–4497.
 +
<li>Degnen, G. E.; Cox, E. C. (1974): Conditional mutator gene in Escherichia coli: isolation, mapping, and effector studies. In Journal of bacteriology 117 (2), pp. 477–487.
 +
<li>Fijalkowska, I. J.; Schaaper, R. M. (1996): Mutants in the Exo I motif of Escherichia coli dnaQ: defective proofreading and inviability due to error catastrophe. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 93 (7), pp. 2856–2861.</li>
 +
<li>Fijalkowska, Iwona J.; Schaaper, Roel M.; Jonczyk, Piotr (2012): DNA replication fidelity in Escherichia coli: a multi-DNA polymerase affair. In FEMS microbiology reviews 36 (6), pp. 1105–1121. DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2012.00338.x.</li>
 +
<li>Fowler, R. G.; Schaaper, R. M. (1997): The role of the mutT gene of Escherichia coli in maintaining replication fidelity. In FEMS microbiology reviews 21 (1), pp. 43–54.</li>
 +
<li>Gabrovsky, Vanessa; Yamamoto, Mitsuko Lynn; Miller, Jeffrey H. (2005): Mutator effects in Escherichia coli caused by the expression of specific foreign genes. In Journal of bacteriology 187 (14), pp. 5044–5048. DOI: 10.1128/JB.187.14.5044-5048.2005.</li>
 +
<li>Gon, Stephanie; Napolitano, Rita; Rocha, Walter; Coulon, Stephane; Fuchs, Robert P. (2011): Increase in dNTP pool size during the DNA damage response plays a key role in spontaneous and induced-mutagenesis in Escherichia coli. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108 (48), pp. 19311–19316. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1113664108.</li>
 +
<li>Greener, A.; Callahan, M.; Jerpseth, B. (1997): An efficient random mutagenesis technique using an E. coli mutator strain. In Molecular biotechnology 7 (2), pp. 189–195. DOI: 10.1007/BF02761755.</li>
 +
<li>Horst, J. P.; Wu, T. H.; Marinus, M. G. (1999): Escherichia coli mutator genes. In Trends in microbiology 7 (1), pp. 29–36.</li>
 +
<li>Junop, Murray S.; Yang, Wei; Funchain, Pauline; Clendenin, Wendy; Miller, Jeffrey H. (2003): <i>In&nbsp;vitro</i> and <i>in&nbsp;vivo</i> studies of MutS, MutL and MutH mutants: correlation of mismatch repair and DNA recombination. In DNA repair 2 (4), pp. 387–405.</li>
 +
<li>Kirby, T. W.; Harvey, S.; DeRose, E. F.; Chalov, S.; Chikova, A. K.; Perrino, F. W. et al. (2006): Structure of the E. coli Pol III epsilon-Hot proofreading complex.</li>
 +
<li>Krokan, Hans E.; Bjoras, Magnar (2013): Base excision repair. In Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology 5 (4), pp. a012583. DOI: 10.1101/cshperspect.a012583.</li>
 +
<li>Lada, A. G.; Krick, C. Frahm; Kozmin, S. G.; Mayorov, V. I.; Karpova, T. S.; Rogozin, I. B.; Pavlov, Y. I. (2011): Mutator effects and mutation signatures of editing deaminases produced in bacteria and yeast. In Biochemistry. Biokhimiia 76 (1), pp. 131–146.</li>
 +
<li>Lee, Heewook; Popodi, Ellen; Tang, Haixu; Foster, Patricia L. (2012): Rate and molecular spectrum of spontaneous mutations in the bacterium Escherichia coli as determined by whole-genome sequencing. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 (41), p. E2774-83. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1210309109.</li>
 +
<li>Lomovskaya, O.; Lewis, K.; Matin, A. (1995): EmrR is a negative regulator of the Escherichia coli multidrug resistance pump EmrAB. In Journal of bacteriology 177 (9), pp. 2328–2334.</li>
 +
<li>Nghiem, Y.; Cabrera, M.; Cupples, C. G.; Miller, J. H. (1988): The mutY gene: a mutator locus in Escherichia coli that generates G.C----T.A transversions. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 85 (8), pp. 2709–2713.</li>
 +
<li>Schaaper, R. M. (1988): Mechanisms of mutagenesis in the Escherichia coli mutator mutD5. Role of DNA mismatch repair. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 85 (21), pp. 8126–8130. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.85.21.8126.</li>
 +
<li>Schaaper, R. M. (1993): Base selection, proofreading, and mismatch repair during DNA replication in Escherichia coli. In The Journal of biological chemistry 268 (32), pp. 23762–23765.</li>
 +
<li>Schaaper, R. M.; Radman, M. (1989): The extreme mutator effect of Escherichia coli mutD5 results from saturation of mismatch repair by excessive DNA replication errors. In The EMBO journal 8 (11), pp. 3511–3516.</li>
 +
<li>Selifonova, O.; Valle, F.; Schellenberger, V. (2001): Rapid evolution of novel traits in microorganisms. In Applied and environmental microbiology 67 (8), pp. 3645–3649. DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.8.3645-3649.2001.</li>
 +
<li>Serrano-Heras, Gemma; Ruiz-Maso, Jose A.; del Solar, Gloria; Espinosa, Manuel; Bravo, Alicia; Salas, Margarita (2007): Protein p56 from the Bacillus subtilis phage phi29 inhibits DNA-binding ability of uracil-DNA glycosylase. In Nucleic acids research 35 (16), pp. 5393–5401. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkm584.</li>
 +
<li>Steensels, Jan; Snoek, Tim; Meersman, Esther; Picca Nicolino, Martina; Voordeckers, Karin; Verstrepen, Kevin J. (2014): Improving industrial yeast strains: exploiting natural and artificial diversity. In FEMS microbiology reviews 38 (5), pp. 947–995. DOI: 10.1111/1574-6976.12073.</li>
 +
<li>Stefan, Alessandra; Radeghieri, Annalisa; Gonzalez Vara y Rodriguez, Antonio; Hochkoeppler, Alejandro (2001): Directed evolution of β-galactosidase from Escherichia coli by mutator strains defective in the 3′→5′ exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase III. In FEBS Letters 493 (2-3), pp. 139–143. DOI: 10.1016/S0014-5793(01)02293-1.</li>
 +
<li>Wilson, D. S.; Keefe, A. D. (2001): Random mutagenesis by PCR. In Current protocols in molecular biology / edited by Frederick M. Ausubel … [et al.] Chapter 8, p. Unit8.3. DOI: 10.1002/0471142727.mb0803s51.</li>
 +
<li>Wong, Tuck Seng; Zhurina, Daria; Schwaneberg, Ulrich (2006): The diversity challenge in directed protein evolution. In Combinatorial chemistry & high throughput screening 9 (4), pp. 271–288.</li>
 +
<li>Xue, Yali; Wang, Qiuju; Long, Quan; Ng, Bee Ling; Swerdlow, Harold; Burton, John et al. (2009): Human Y chromosome base-substitution mutation rate measured by direct sequencing in a deep-rooting pedigree. In Current biology : CB 19 (17), pp. 1453–1457. DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.07.032.</li>
 +
<li>Yang, Hanjing; Wolff, Erika; Kim, Mandy; Diep, Amy; Miller, Jeffrey H. (2004): Identification of mutator genes and mutational pathways in Escherichia coli using a multicopy cloning approach. In Molecular microbiology 53 (1), pp. 283–295. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2004.04125.x.</li>
 +
</ul>
 
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Latest revision as of 14:52, 30 November 2016



Global mutagenesis

Impairing the DNA fidelity mechanisms

Abstract

Organisms ensure the fidelity of their DNA by three overlapping pathways namely base selection, proofreading and mismatch repair. These pathways cumulate in replication fidelity of ~10-10 mutations per bp per generation in E. coli (Lee et al. 2012). Overexpression of dominant negative variants of major players in this system can increase the mutation rate substantially. Recently, mutation rates up to 6.2×10-6 mutations per bp and per generation were obtained by using a plasmid-borne mutator system (Badran, Liu 2015). We aim to make this mutator plasmid available for the whole iGEM community by rebuilding it with defined iGEM parts (see our BBa_K208117). We envision an application in the directed evolution of our binding protein. Furthermore, implementation in other directed evolution approaches could be feasibly in which our plasmid pose an in vivo alternative to error-prone PCR (Wilson, Keefe 2001) or exogene mutagens (reviewed in Wong et al. 2006; Steensels et al. 2014).

Maintenance of DNA fidelity and creating in vivo mutagenesis by affecting the participating proteins

DNA is the single blueprint for all proteins of an organism. Minor changes in the DNA sequence are mostly without significant consequences, but in some cases the consequences are detrimental e.g. by rendering encoded crucial proteins useless. Therefore, an effective system of DNA repair mechanisms emerged during evolution. The DNA fidelity system is composed of three main mechanisms, which contribute to the high fidelity. The first fidelity mechanism lies in selecting the correct base for incorporation during replication of DNA. This process of base selection reduces the error rate by 105 mutations per bp per generation. During replication, the acting polymerase (mainly polymerase III in E. coli) directly corrects falsely incorporated bases. This process is called proofreading and reduces the error rate by 102 mutations per bp per generation. Other mutations in the DNA e.g. introduced through replication errors or other mutagenic sources are repaired by the mismatch repair systems. This system reduces the error rate by 103 mutations per bp per generation. (Schaaper 1993; Fijalkowska et al. 2012) All these fidelity mechanisms contributed to the error rate reduction, leading to a final rate of about 10-10 mutations per bp per generation. (Lee et al. 2012).
Many variants of the participating proteins with (partial) loss-of-function were identified and described in the literature (Degnen, Cox 1974; Nghiem et al. 1988; Schaaper, Radman 1989; Fowler, Schaaper 1997; Junop et al. 2003). The common phenotype upon the mutants was a strongly increased mutation rate. It did not take long before better-characterized hypermutator strains arose as a tool to study the effect of random mutations on proteins or to improve proteins trough means of directed evolution (Greener et al. 1997; Selifonova et al. 2001; Stefan et al. 2001). A common issue among different applications of genomic mutator genes is the general genetic instability and frequent unviability of these strains. For example, the E. coli strain, which chromosomally harbors the strongest known mutator dnaQ926 is almost completely unviable without additional mutations (Fijalkowska, Schaaper 1996). Therefore, recent development was directed to the rational design of a plasmid-borne mutator system. Combination of strong mutator capabilities with a tight inducible promoter should result in a controllable mutagenesis system, generally circumventing many issues of chromosome-based hypermutator strains. Furthermore, the rational combination of different groups of mutator genes enables compositions, which have a very balanced mutagenesis spectra
Our mutation system was designed to use an untargeted mutation approach as an alternative to the error-prone polymerase I. Therefore, we reconstructed the previously described mutator plasmid (Badran, Liu 2015), which consists of six different genes.
Figure 1: Schematic view of the mutator genes on a plasmid developed by Badran and coworkers (Badran, Liu 2015). This mutator plasmid uses six genes under tight control through an arabinose promoter. The different DNA fidelity mechanisms affected by the genes are indicated by coloring.
Overexpression of these mutator genes rises the mutation frequency in E. coli to 6.2×10-6 per bp per generation with induction and only ~4×10-9 per bp per generation without induction. Moreover, the mutation spectrum is very diverse.
Figure 2: Mutation spectrum of the mutagenesis plasmid developed by Badran and coworkers (Badran and Liu 2015).

DnaQ926

The dnaQ gene encodes ε-subunit of E. coli DNA polymerase III, which is responsible for the proof reading activity of this enzyme. DnaQ confers 3'-exonuclease activity, which excises falsely incorporated bases during replication. DnaQ926 contains two amino acid substitutions (D12A, E14A) in the Exo I region, which prevents coordination of an essential metal ion and therefore abolishes the proofreading activity (Fijalkowska, Schaaper 1996). The overall structure of DnaQ and interactions with other proteins of the DNA polymerase III complex are not affected by these substitutions. dnaQ926 acts as a dominant negative gene causing a strong mutator phenotype even in E. coli strains with chromosomal wild type dnaQ (Cox, Horner 1986). DnaQ926 competes against DnaQ about incorporation into the DNA polymerase III complex. Incorporation of DnaQ926 leads to proofreading deficient replication complexes. Therefore, overexpression or plasmid-based expression of dnaQ926 is supposed to yield an increased mutation effect. The huge amount of mutations introduced by dnaQ926 overwhelms the E. coli mismatch repair system leading to the manifestation of mutations from various sources (Schaaper, Radman 1989; Damagnez et al. 1989)
The exact rate and mutagenesis spectrum of DnaQ926 depends on the used cultivation media. Rich media leads high mutation frequency (3.7×104 over background) with mostly transitions, while minimal media cause less mutations (4.8×102 over background) and mostly transversions (mainly AT → TA). The faster growth of bacteria in rich media decreases the time the time to remove errors before cell division via the repair mechanisms (Schaaper 1988).
Figure 3: Structure of DnaQ with indicated mutation sites. In DnaQ926 the acidic amino acids D12A, E14A (red) are changed to alanine. Thereby complexation of the function-essential manganese ion (grey) is abolished due to missing negative charges at the amino acid residues. (PDB: 2IDO) (Kirby et al. 2006)

DNA adenine methylase (Dam) and SeqA

A mechanism of mismatch repair is the Dam-directed mismatch repair (DDMR). Parental and daughter DNA strands are modified by methylation at GATC sites. These methylations are added after replication by the DNA adenine methylase (Dam). In the timeframe between daughter strand synthesis and Dam methylation the repair mechanisms can distinguish between the correct base on the methylated parent strand (template) and the falsely incorporated base on the non-methylated daughter strand (product). This modification is used by the mismatch repair proteins MutS, MutL and MutH, which repair the daughter strand relying on information from the parent strand (Horst et al. 1999).
SeqA is a GATC-binding protein, which also controls the methylation state of DNA. It counteracts Dam by demethylating DNA. This results in hypomethylated DNA on both strands, which further decreases the efficiency of DNA mismatch repair (Yang et al. 2004).
Combined overexpression of dam and seqA strongly shifts the methylation state of the DNA. Methylation of the parental strand by SeqA is reduced while the methylation of the daughter strand via Dam is increased. Both effects abrogate the methylation difference between parental and daughter strand and prevent effective mismatch repair.

EmrR

As mentioned before, the main factor of replication fidelity is the correct base incorporation during replication. This is mainly dependent on the α-subunit of DNA polymerase III, but the intracellular concentrations of the single nucleotidetriphosphates are important too (ref?). A strong imbalance between the single nucleotide-triphosphates or a high concentration of base analogs can increase the rate of erroneous base incorporation (Gon et al. 2011).
This metabolic imbalance is achieved by the overexpression of emrR. The transcription repressor EmrR reduces the expression of the repressor of the emrAB operon. This operon encodes an efflux pump, which is linked to multidrug resistance (Lomovskaya et al. 1995). However, the native function of EmrAB is the export of intermediates of the purine and pyrimidine metabolism. An overexpression of emrR reduces the concentration of EmrA and EmrB leading to increased concentration of nucleotide precursors inside the cell. At high concentrations, these nucleotide precursors can act as base analogs. Mutations are caused either incorporation of the nucleotide precursor or by failure during the repair attempt of an erroneous base incorporation(Gabrovsky et al. 2005).

Uracil glycosylase inhibitor and Pteromyzon marinus cytidin deaminase 1

Cytidin deaminases (cda) are DNA editing enzymes in eukaryotes, which have multiple functions like the generation of antibody diversity, defence against retroviruses and demethylation during development (Lada et al. 2011).
The main activity of CDAs is the deamination from cytidin to uracil in CG base pairs. The resulting UG base pairs split in replication in one CG and one UA basepair. Therefore, the main mutations created by CDAs are C → T transitions.
Figure 4: Deamination of cytidin by cytidin deasminases and possible resulting mutations by replication of base excision repair (BER). Cytidin deaminase (CDA) deaminases cytidin to uracil. The resulting GU base pair leads to a UA and a CG base pair during replication. Alternatively, the uracil is repaired via the base excision repair. Thereby, uracil-DNA-glycosylase (UNG) cuts out uracil and the abasic site (AP-site) inside the DNA gets repaired by specialized endonucleases and polymerases.
Organisms have created mechanism to repair mismatches as UG pairs via the base excision repair (BER). Thereby the mismatched base is cut out by the uracil-DNA-glycosylase (UNG). The resulting abasic site (AP-site) is cleaved by an AP-endonuclease and the patch is filled by a variety of specialized proteins (Krokan, Bjoras 2013).
Overexpression of eukaryotic cytidin deaminase increases the mutation rate in bacteria. The CDA1 of Pteromyzon marinus was identified in a comprehensive screen as the most potent cytidin deaminase when expressed in E. coli. Overexpression of P. marinus cda1 increases the mutation rate to 10-6-10-5 per bp. In ung deficient strains the effect was amplified by a factor of 50 due to the lack of UNG induced BER (Lada et al. 2011).
The CDS of P. marinus cda1 was codon optimized for E. coli integrated into our mutagenesis plasmid to increase the expression. Moreover, the uracil-DNA-glycosylase inhibitor (ugi) was added. This short protein mimics the structure of abasic sides, binds to UNG and inhibits the UNG mediated BER pathway (Serrano-Heras et al. 2007).
Figure 5: Structural alignment of UNG-UGI and UNG-DNA complexes. The E. coli UNG-UGI complex (PDB: 1LQG) was aligned to Deinococcus radiodurans UNG-DNA complex (PDB: 4UQM). The structural mimicry of UGI (red) to DNA with an abasic side (blue) and the binding to UNG (green) is highlighted.
See here how we characterized our genome wide mutator by reversion assays and high-throughput sequencing

References

  • Badran, Ahmed H.; Liu, David R. (2015): Development of potent in vivo mutagenesis plasmids with broad mutational spectra. In Nature communications 6, p. 8425. DOI: 10.1038/ncomms9425.
  • Cox, E. C.; Horner, D. L. (1986): DNA sequence and coding properties of mutD(dnaQ) a dominant Escherichia coli mutator gene. In Journal of molecular biology 190 (1), pp. 113–117.
  • Damagnez, V.; Doutriaux, M. P.; Radman, M. (1989): Saturation of mismatch repair in the mutD5 mutator strain of Escherichia coli. In Journal of bacteriology 171 (8), pp. 4494–4497.
  • Degnen, G. E.; Cox, E. C. (1974): Conditional mutator gene in Escherichia coli: isolation, mapping, and effector studies. In Journal of bacteriology 117 (2), pp. 477–487.
  • Fijalkowska, I. J.; Schaaper, R. M. (1996): Mutants in the Exo I motif of Escherichia coli dnaQ: defective proofreading and inviability due to error catastrophe. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 93 (7), pp. 2856–2861.
  • Fijalkowska, Iwona J.; Schaaper, Roel M.; Jonczyk, Piotr (2012): DNA replication fidelity in Escherichia coli: a multi-DNA polymerase affair. In FEMS microbiology reviews 36 (6), pp. 1105–1121. DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-6976.2012.00338.x.
  • Fowler, R. G.; Schaaper, R. M. (1997): The role of the mutT gene of Escherichia coli in maintaining replication fidelity. In FEMS microbiology reviews 21 (1), pp. 43–54.
  • Gabrovsky, Vanessa; Yamamoto, Mitsuko Lynn; Miller, Jeffrey H. (2005): Mutator effects in Escherichia coli caused by the expression of specific foreign genes. In Journal of bacteriology 187 (14), pp. 5044–5048. DOI: 10.1128/JB.187.14.5044-5048.2005.
  • Gon, Stephanie; Napolitano, Rita; Rocha, Walter; Coulon, Stephane; Fuchs, Robert P. (2011): Increase in dNTP pool size during the DNA damage response plays a key role in spontaneous and induced-mutagenesis in Escherichia coli. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 108 (48), pp. 19311–19316. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1113664108.
  • Greener, A.; Callahan, M.; Jerpseth, B. (1997): An efficient random mutagenesis technique using an E. coli mutator strain. In Molecular biotechnology 7 (2), pp. 189–195. DOI: 10.1007/BF02761755.
  • Horst, J. P.; Wu, T. H.; Marinus, M. G. (1999): Escherichia coli mutator genes. In Trends in microbiology 7 (1), pp. 29–36.
  • Junop, Murray S.; Yang, Wei; Funchain, Pauline; Clendenin, Wendy; Miller, Jeffrey H. (2003): In vitro and in vivo studies of MutS, MutL and MutH mutants: correlation of mismatch repair and DNA recombination. In DNA repair 2 (4), pp. 387–405.
  • Kirby, T. W.; Harvey, S.; DeRose, E. F.; Chalov, S.; Chikova, A. K.; Perrino, F. W. et al. (2006): Structure of the E. coli Pol III epsilon-Hot proofreading complex.
  • Krokan, Hans E.; Bjoras, Magnar (2013): Base excision repair. In Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology 5 (4), pp. a012583. DOI: 10.1101/cshperspect.a012583.
  • Lada, A. G.; Krick, C. Frahm; Kozmin, S. G.; Mayorov, V. I.; Karpova, T. S.; Rogozin, I. B.; Pavlov, Y. I. (2011): Mutator effects and mutation signatures of editing deaminases produced in bacteria and yeast. In Biochemistry. Biokhimiia 76 (1), pp. 131–146.
  • Lee, Heewook; Popodi, Ellen; Tang, Haixu; Foster, Patricia L. (2012): Rate and molecular spectrum of spontaneous mutations in the bacterium Escherichia coli as determined by whole-genome sequencing. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 109 (41), p. E2774-83. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1210309109.
  • Lomovskaya, O.; Lewis, K.; Matin, A. (1995): EmrR is a negative regulator of the Escherichia coli multidrug resistance pump EmrAB. In Journal of bacteriology 177 (9), pp. 2328–2334.
  • Nghiem, Y.; Cabrera, M.; Cupples, C. G.; Miller, J. H. (1988): The mutY gene: a mutator locus in Escherichia coli that generates G.C----T.A transversions. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 85 (8), pp. 2709–2713.
  • Schaaper, R. M. (1988): Mechanisms of mutagenesis in the Escherichia coli mutator mutD5. Role of DNA mismatch repair. In Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 85 (21), pp. 8126–8130. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.85.21.8126.
  • Schaaper, R. M. (1993): Base selection, proofreading, and mismatch repair during DNA replication in Escherichia coli. In The Journal of biological chemistry 268 (32), pp. 23762–23765.
  • Schaaper, R. M.; Radman, M. (1989): The extreme mutator effect of Escherichia coli mutD5 results from saturation of mismatch repair by excessive DNA replication errors. In The EMBO journal 8 (11), pp. 3511–3516.
  • Selifonova, O.; Valle, F.; Schellenberger, V. (2001): Rapid evolution of novel traits in microorganisms. In Applied and environmental microbiology 67 (8), pp. 3645–3649. DOI: 10.1128/AEM.67.8.3645-3649.2001.
  • Serrano-Heras, Gemma; Ruiz-Maso, Jose A.; del Solar, Gloria; Espinosa, Manuel; Bravo, Alicia; Salas, Margarita (2007): Protein p56 from the Bacillus subtilis phage phi29 inhibits DNA-binding ability of uracil-DNA glycosylase. In Nucleic acids research 35 (16), pp. 5393–5401. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkm584.
  • Steensels, Jan; Snoek, Tim; Meersman, Esther; Picca Nicolino, Martina; Voordeckers, Karin; Verstrepen, Kevin J. (2014): Improving industrial yeast strains: exploiting natural and artificial diversity. In FEMS microbiology reviews 38 (5), pp. 947–995. DOI: 10.1111/1574-6976.12073.
  • Stefan, Alessandra; Radeghieri, Annalisa; Gonzalez Vara y Rodriguez, Antonio; Hochkoeppler, Alejandro (2001): Directed evolution of β-galactosidase from Escherichia coli by mutator strains defective in the 3′→5′ exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase III. In FEBS Letters 493 (2-3), pp. 139–143. DOI: 10.1016/S0014-5793(01)02293-1.
  • Wilson, D. S.; Keefe, A. D. (2001): Random mutagenesis by PCR. In Current protocols in molecular biology / edited by Frederick M. Ausubel … [et al.] Chapter 8, p. Unit8.3. DOI: 10.1002/0471142727.mb0803s51.
  • Wong, Tuck Seng; Zhurina, Daria; Schwaneberg, Ulrich (2006): The diversity challenge in directed protein evolution. In Combinatorial chemistry & high throughput screening 9 (4), pp. 271–288.
  • Xue, Yali; Wang, Qiuju; Long, Quan; Ng, Bee Ling; Swerdlow, Harold; Burton, John et al. (2009): Human Y chromosome base-substitution mutation rate measured by direct sequencing in a deep-rooting pedigree. In Current biology : CB 19 (17), pp. 1453–1457. DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.07.032.
  • Yang, Hanjing; Wolff, Erika; Kim, Mandy; Diep, Amy; Miller, Jeffrey H. (2004): Identification of mutator genes and mutational pathways in Escherichia coli using a multicopy cloning approach. In Molecular microbiology 53 (1), pp. 283–295. DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2004.04125.x.