Nucleoside Analogues Are Potent Inducers of Pol V-mediated Mutagenesis

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Date
2021-06-05
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MDPI
Abstract
Drugs targeting DNA and RNA in mammalian cells or viruses can also affect bacteria present in the host and thereby induce the bacterial SOS system. This has the potential to increase mutagenesis and the development of antimicrobial resistance (AMR). Here, we have examined nucleoside analogues (NAs) commonly used in anti-viral and anti-cancer therapies for potential effects on mutagenesis in Escherichia coli, using the rifampicin mutagenicity assay. To further explorethe mode of action of the NAs, we applied E. coli deletion mutants, a peptide inhibiting Pol V (APIM peptide) and metabolome and proteome analyses. Five out of the thirteen NAs examined, including three nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) and two anti-cancer drugs, increased the mutation frequency in E. coli by more than 25-fold at doses that were within reported plasma concentration range (Pl.CR), but that did not affect bacterial growth. We show that the SOS response is induced and that the increase in mutation frequency is mediated by the TLS polymerase Pol V.Quantitative mass spectrometry-based metabolite profiling did not reveal large changes in nucleoside phosphate or other central carbon metabolite pools, which suggests that the SOS induction is an effect of increased replicative stress. Our results suggest that NAs/NRTIs can contribute to the development of AMR and that drugs inhibiting Pol V can reverse this mutagenesis
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Keywords
NA, NRTIs, β-clamp, SOS, Pol V, TLS, AMR, MDR, WACCBIP_NCDS, University of Ghana, Animesh Sharma, Eric S. Donkor, Lydia Mosi, Samuel Duodu, Per Bruheim, Marit Otterlei
Citation
Sumabe, B. K., Ræder, S. B., Røst, L. M., Sharma, A., Donkor, E. S., Mosi, L., ... & Otterlei, M. (2021). Nucleoside Analogues Are Potent Inducers of Pol V-mediated Mutagenesis. Biomolecules, 11(6), 843.
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