The presence of the DNA repair genes mutM, mutY, mutL, and mutS is related to proteome size in bacterial genomes
DNA repair is expected to be a modulator of underlying mutation rates, however the major factors affecting the distribution of DNA repair pathways have not been determined. The Proteomic Constraint theory proposes that mutation rates are inversely proportional to the amount of heredity information contained in a genome, which is effectively the proteome. Thus, organisms with larger proteomes are expected to possess more efficient DNA repair. We show that an important factor influencing the presence or absence of four DNA repair genes mutM, mutY, mutL, and mutS is indeed the size of the bacterial proteome. This is true both of intracellular and other bacteria. In addition, the relationship of DNA repair to genome GC content was examined. In principle, if a DNA repair pathway is biased in the types of mutations it corrects, this may alter the genome GC content. The presence of the mismatch repair genes mutL and mutS was not correlated with genome GC content, consistent with their involvement in an unbiased DNA repair pathway. In contrast, the presence of the base excision repair genes mutM and mutY, whose products both correct GC → AT mutations, was positively correlated with genome GC content, consistent with their biased repair mechanism. Phylogenetic analysis however indicates that the relationship between the presence of mutM and mutY genes and genome GC content is not a simple one. © 2012 Garcia-Gonzalez, Rivera-Rivera and Massey.
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- 3105 Genetics
- 1801 Law
- 1103 Clinical Sciences
- 0604 Genetics
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Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Related Subject Headings
- 3105 Genetics
- 1801 Law
- 1103 Clinical Sciences
- 0604 Genetics