Frontiers in Microbiology (Apr 2023)

The SMC-like RecN protein is at the crossroads of several genotoxic stress responses in Escherichia coli

  • Adrien Camus,
  • Elena Espinosa,
  • Pénélope Zapater Baras,
  • Parul Singh,
  • Nicole Quenech’Du,
  • Elise Vickridge,
  • Elise Vickridge,
  • Mauro Modesti,
  • François Xavier Barre,
  • Olivier Espéli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1146496
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionDNA damage repair (DDR) is an essential process for living organisms and contributes to genome maintenance and evolution. DDR involves different pathways including Homologous recombination (HR), Nucleotide Excision Repair (NER) and Base excision repair (BER) for example. The activity of each pathway is revealed with particular drug inducing lesions, but the repair of most DNA lesions depends on concomitant or subsequent action of the multiple pathways.MethodsIn the present study, we used two genotoxic antibiotics, mitomycin C (MMC) and Bleomycin (BLM), to decipher the interplays between these different pathways in E. coli. We combined genomic methods (TIS and Hi-SC2) and imaging assays with genetic dissections.ResultsWe demonstrate that only a small set of DDR proteins are common to the repair of the lesions induced by these two drugs. Among them, RecN, an SMC-like protein, plays an important role by controlling sister chromatids dynamics and genome morphology at different steps of the repair processes. We further demonstrate that RecN influence on sister chromatids dynamics is not equivalent during the processing of the lesions induced by the two drugs. We observed that RecN activity and stability requires a pre-processing of the MMC-induced lesions by the NER but not for BLM-induced lesions.DiscussionThose results show that RecN plays a major role in rescuing toxic intermediates generated by the BER pathway in addition to its well-known importance to the repair of double strand breaks by HR.

Keywords