Authors
M Pilar Francino, Lin Chao, Margaret A Riley, Howard Ochman
Publication date
1996/4/5
Journal
Science
Volume
272
Issue
5258
Pages
107-109
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
Although certain replication errors occur at different frequencies on each of the complementary strands of DNA, it remains unclear whether this bias is prevalent enough during chromosome replication to affect sequence evolution. Here, nucleotide substitutions in enteric bacteria were examined, and no difference in mutation rates was detected between the leading and lagging strands, but in comparing the coding and noncoding strands, an excess of C→T changes was observed on the coding strand. This asymmetry is best explained by transcription-coupled repair on the noncoding strand. Although the vast majority of mutations are thought to arise from spontaneous errors during replication, this result implicates DNA damage as a substantial source of mutations in the wild.
Total citations
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