%0 Journal Article %A Butler, L. O. %A Grist, Roger W. %T The Effect of D2O on the Growth and Transforming Activities of Streptococcus pneumoniae %D 1984 %J Microbiology, %V 130 %N 3 %P 483-494 %@ 1465-2080 %R https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-130-3-483 %I Microbiology Society, %X After an initial period of growth in medium made up in D2O, most strains of pneumococcus tested dramatically lost viability, the extent of the loss depending on the strain and on the amount of contaminating H2O in the D2O. This was followed by a recovery period. Once a strain was ‘adapted’, the ability to grow in D2O-medium without cell death was inherited, even after passage through H2O-medium, indicating the selection of mutants. Cultures that had not reached ‘full adaptation’ also exhibited cell death if transferred into either D2O-medium or H2O-medium, supporting the conclusion that the presence of hydrogen and deuterium together caused the toxicity. ‘Adapted’ cells exhibited an increased mutation frequency to a variety of antibiotic resistances, the propensity for this appearing in the death phase of ‘adaptation’. The specific transforming activity of DNA preparations from cultures undergoing ‘adaptation’ decreased before DNA synthesis ceased indicating damage to the DNA. The integration efficiency of a low-efficiency marker also dropped during ‘adaptation’ before returning to the initial value when measured in a Hex- recipient, but remained constant in a Hex+ recipient, suggesting that the Hex system may be involved in repair of the DNA damage. ‘Adapted’ organisms showed evidence of possessing higher Hex activity and were also able to repair lesions caused by UV-irradiation better than the wild-type. %U https://www.microbiologyresearch.org/content/journal/micro/10.1099/00221287-130-3-483