Polyphosphate Accumulation in Escherichia coli in Response to Defects in DNA Metabolism |
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Authors: | Luciana Amado Andrei Kuzminov |
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Affiliation: | Department of Microbiology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois |
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Abstract: | Phenol-chloroform extraction of [32P]orthophosphate-labeled Escherichia coli cells followed by alkaline gel electrophoresis revealed, besides the expected chromosomal DNA, two non-DNA species that we have identified as lipopolysaccharides and polyphosphates by using a combination of biochemical and genetic techniques. We used this serendipitously found straightforward protocol for direct polyphosphate detection to quantify polyphosphate levels in E. coli mutants with diverse defects in the DNA metabolism. We detected increased polyphosphate accumulation in the ligA, ligA recBCD, dut ung, and thyA mutants. Polyphosphate accumulation may thus be an indicator of general DNA stress.DNA replication intermediates, also known as Okazaki fragments, have classically been detected by pulse labeling thymine-limited thyA mutant cells with [3H]thymidine, a DNA-specific label (27). However, when limited for thymidine, thyA mutants are known to undergo thymine-less death (1), a phenomenon during which chromosomal DNA suffers single-strand breaks (24). The products of this nicking could be mistaken for Okazaki fragments, compromising DNA synthesis studies that rely on [3H]thymidine labeling (28, 37). Caveats were also raised against interpreting [3H]thymidine labeling as an accurate reflection of DNA synthesis in cells of higher eukaryotes, on the basis of differences with [32P]orthophosphate DNA labeling (10, 15, 30).To avoid the possibility of thymine starvation in our experiments, we also attempted to visualize Okazaki fragments by using the [32P]orthophosphate label which we routinely employ to label chromosomal DNA for pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (17, 36). Since we expected that the bulk of the 32P label will be deposited into RNA, we removed RNA altogether by separating chromosomal DNA from replication intermediates in alkaline agarose gels. We found, however, that Okazaki pieces cannot be detected using [32P]orthophosphate even by alkaline agarose because there are other molecules in larger amounts in the cells that take in 32P-label and mask the replication intermediates. We report on the identification and quantification of two of the “masking species” in wild-type Escherichia coli, as well as in several mutants. |
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