Genome Editing Outcomes Reveal Mycobacterial NucS Participates in a Short-Patch Repair of DNA Mismatches.
Tanjina IslamEric A JosephsPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
In the canonical DNA mismatch repair (MMR) mechanism in bacteria, if during replication a nucleotide is incorrectly mis-paired with the template strand, the resulting repair of this mis-pair can result in the degradation and re-synthesis of hundreds or thousands of nucleotides on the newly-replicated strand (long-patch repair). While mycobacteria, which include important pathogens such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis , lack the otherwise highly-conserved enzymes required for the canonical MMR reaction, it was found that disruption of a mycobacterial mismatch-sensitive endonuclease NucS results in a hyper-mutative phenotype, which has led to the idea that NucS might be involved in a cryptic, independently-evolved DNA MMR mechanism. It has been proposed that nuclease activity at a mismatch might result in correction by homologous recombination (HR) with a sister chromatid. Using oligonucleotide recombination, which allows us to introduce mismatches during replication specifically into the genomes of a model for M. tuberculosis, Mycobacterium smegmatis , we find that NucS participates in a direct repair of DNA mismatches where the patch of excised nucleotides is largely confined to within ∼5 - 6 bp of the mis-paired nucleotides, which is inconsistent with mechanistic models of canonical mycobacterial HR or other double-strand break (DSB) repair reactions. The results presented provide evidence of a novel NucS-associated mycobacterial MMR mechanism occurring in vivo to regulate genetic mutations in mycobacteria.
Keyphrases
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- circulating tumor
- genome editing
- crispr cas
- dna repair
- cell free
- single molecule
- pulmonary tuberculosis
- dna damage
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- dna methylation
- nucleic acid
- oxidative stress
- multidrug resistant
- circulating tumor cells
- insulin resistance
- weight loss
- hiv infected