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Detection of mutator subpopulations in Salmonella typhimurium LT2 by reversion of his alleles
Authors:J. Eugene LeClerc   William L. Payne   Eugene Kupchella  Thomas A. Cebula  
Affiliation:

Molecular Biology Branch (HFS-237), Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, US Food and Drug Administration, 200 C St. S.W., Washington, DC 20204, USA

Abstract:Defects in the methyl-directed mismatch repair lead to both the hypermutability phenotype and removal of a barrier to genetic exchange between species. Mutator bacteria carrying such defects occur frequently among bacterial pathogens, suggesting that subpopulations of mutators are contained within pathogen clones and give rise to the genetic variants that are acted upon by selective forces to allow survival or successful infection. We report here on the detection of the mutator subpopulation in Salmonella typhimurium and determination of its frequency in laboratory cultures. The analysis involved screening for mutators among revertants of S. typhimurium histidine auxotrophs selected for the His+ phenotype, since the frequency of mutators is expected to be increased in the selected mutant population they helped to spawn. The increases in spontaneous reversion of histidine mutations were first measured in isogenic strains carrying mismatch repair-defective mutH, mutL, mutS, or uvrD alleles, relative to their mismatch repair-proficient counterparts. Screening for the mutator phenotype in nearly 12,000 revertants of repair-proficient strains carrying his mutations highly stimulated for reversion in mutator backgrounds, the base substitution in hisG428 and frameshift in hisC3076, yielded five mutator strains (0.04%). the his+ reversion mutations contained within the newly-arisen mutator strains were characteristic of the predominant nucleotide changes expected in such mutators, as assessed by comparison with the spectra for reversion events in wild-type and mismatch correction-defective backgrounds. The results show that subpopulations of mutators, residing in normal populations at a finite frequency, can be culled from the culture by strong selection for a required phenotype. We calculate that the frequency of mutators in the unselected population of S. typhimurium is 1–4×10−6, an incidence of 10-fold lower than that expected based on studies of laboratory cultures of Escherichia coli.
Keywords:Salmonella typhimurium   Evolution   Mutator   Mismatch correction   Spontaneous mutation   mutS   mutL   mutH   uvrD   Horizontal transfer
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