Genetic Recombination in Escherichia coli: The Role of Exonuclease I

  1. Sidney R. Kushner,
  2. Haruko Nagaishi,
  3. Ann Templin, and
  4. Alvin J. Clark
  1. Department of Molecular Biology, University of California, Berkeley, Calif. 94720

Abstract

The indirect suppression of recB - and recB - recC - mutations by the sbcB - allele is caused by the loss of a nuclease active on denatured DNA. Results from enzyme purifications and studies with a specific antiserum demonstrate that the activity present in sbcB + strains, and lost in sbcB - strains, is exonuclease I. It is likely that sbcB is the structural gene for exonuclease I. The loss of exonuclease I activity restores the recombination proficiency of Escherichia coli cells that has been lost by mutations in the recB and/or recC genes. This indicates that in the absence of the recB-recC-determined enzyme, exonuclease I prevents recombination. Hypothetical pathways illustrating this conclusion are presented.

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