Abstract |
The study used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to speed the processing of revertants of Salmonella typhimurium TA98 for DNA sequence analysis. Briefly, a crude DNA extract from a single colony was prepared and used in an asymmetric PCR to amplify a 228-bp fragment containing the hisD3052 mutation approximately in the center. Following ultra-filtration, the ssDNA was sequenced using an end-labeled probe and dideoxy sequencing. The most frequent mutation among the revertants was a -2 deletion of GC or CG within the sequence CGCGCGCG, which is upstream of the hisD3052 mutation. The deletion occurred in 38% (6/16) of the spontaneous (-S9) revertants and in 94% (15/16) of a set of 1-nitropyrene-induced revertants. Misalignment of complementary DNA strands within this repeat may account for this mutation, although the possible formation of Z-DNA within this region may also play a role. Other mutations, mostly deletions but also some complex mutations (insertions/deletions/substitutions), occurred within quasi-palindromic regions of DNA. The potential DNA secondary structures within such regions may mediate the templated production of some of these mutations. |