DNA repair is essential for combatting the adverse effects of damage to the genome. One example of base damage is O 6 -methylguanine (O 6 mG), which stably pairs with thymine during replication and thereby creates a promutagenic O 6 mG:T mismatch. This mismatch has also been linked with cellular toxicity. Therefore, in the absence of repair, O 6 mG:T mismatches can lead to cell death or result in G:C→A:T transition mutations upon the next round of replication. Cysteine thiolate residues on the Ada and Ogt methyltransferase (MTase) proteins directly reverse the O 6 mG base damage to yield guanine. When a cytosine is opposite the lesion, MTase repair restores a normal G:C pairing. However, if replication past the lesion has produced an O 6 mG:T mismatch, MTase conversion to a G:T mispair must still undergo correction to avoid mutation. Two mismatch repair pathways in E. coli that convert G:T mispairs to native G:C pairings are methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR) and very short patch repair (VSPR). This work examined the possible roles that proteins in these pathways play in coordination with the canonical MTase repair of O 6 mG:T mismatches. The possibility of this repair network was analyzed by probing the efficiency of MTase repair of a single O 6 mG residue in cells deficient in individual mismatch repair proteins (Dam, MutH, MutS, MutL, or Vsr). We found that MTase repair in cells deficient in Dam or MutH showed wild-type levels of MTase repair. In contrast, cells lacking any of the VSPR proteins MutS, MutL, or Vsr showed a decrease in repair of O 6 mG by the Ada and Ogt MTases. Evidence is presented that the VSPR pathway positively influences MTase repair of O 6 mG:T mismatches, and assists the efficiency of restoring these mismatches to native G:C base pairs.