Title: Bacterial Genetics
1Chapter 11
2Prokaryotic diversity
- Why are prokaryotes so diverse when they do not
reproduce sexually? - Mutation
- Inherited change in genotype that can lead to
change in the phenotype - Small gradual change
- Recombination
- Integration of DNA (from another organism or
genetic element) into chromosomal DNA - Sometimes very large changes
3Mutants
- A different gene sequence than parent
- Often silent
- Change in nucleic acid, but no change in amino
acid coded for - Sometimes phenotypic changes
- Requires change in amino acid
- Lethal, neutral, beneficial
- Sometimes a change in amino acid (so not silent)
but no change in protein so no phenotypic change
4Wild type versus mutant
- Wild type typically refers to strain isolated
from nature - hisC gene codes for HisC protein
- Mutation in the hisC gene are called hisC1,
hisC2 etc. - Phenotype His or His
- His capable of making histidine
- His- not capable of making histidine
5Isolation of mutants
- Selectable mutants can select for a phenotype
by subjecting population to a selection factor - Give the mutant a growth advantage under certain
environmental conditions - Selectable antibiotic resistance
- Only certain bacteria will grow on a particular
antibiotic - Used for cloning
6Isolation of mutants
- Non-selectable usually does not have an advantage
or disadvantage over parent - Loss of color (may still have a selective
advantage in a natural ecosystem, but cannot
easily select for the trait in culture) - Non-selectable mutants have to be screened
- Some will have a different color but all will
grow
7Isolation of mutants
- Screening is always more tedious than selection
- Replica plating is one method to screen for
nutritional mutants - His C mutant cannot make histidine
(auxotroph) - Auxotroph a nutritional mutant (requires a
growth factor that the WT parent did not require) - Prototroph the WT parent from which the
auxotroph was derived
8Replicate plating to isolate auxotrophic mutants
grow with His but not without His
Figure 11.5
9Isolation of mutants
- Penicillin selection method is another
- Select against non mutants first then grow mutant
organisms left in culture - Penicillin used to enrich His mutants
- Then replicate plate
- Penicillin kills only growing cells
- Penicillin added to a culture lacking the
nutrient desired by the mutant parent cells
killed, mutant cells unaffected - Transfer to a plate containing the nutrient
isolate desired mutants
10Penicillin Selection Method
Inoculate new media containing no histidine
Culture containing Histidine
His- mutant (auxotroph) which cannot grow
without Histidine
His wild type (prototroph) which can without
Histidine
- Penicillin only kills growing cells
- Auxotrophic mutants will not grow (will not die
in presence of penicillin) - Transfer culture to media with histidine and
survivors (mutants) grow
11Molecular Basis of Mutation
- Induced mutations
- Those made deliberately
- Spontaneous mutations
- Those that occur without human intervention
- Can result from exposure to natural radiation or
oxygen radicals - Point mutations
- Mutations that change only one base pair
- Can lead to single amino acid change in a protein
or no change at all
12Point mutations
- Involving one base pair
- Nucleic acid base substitution
- Missense changes the codon (1st or 2nd
base)?wrong amino acid - Changes protein
- Sometimes a phenotypic change and sometimes not
- Nonsense changes the codon and codes for a stop
codon - Translation terminated early? protein often
non-functional - Silent changes last base in codon?same amino
acid usually - Degeneracy of the code
13Point mutation Base substitution
Figure 11.6
14Point mutations
- Transitions
- One purine base (A or G) is substituted for
another purine or one pyrimidine base (C or T) is
substituted for another pyrimidine - Transversions
- A purine is substituted for a pyrimidine or a
pyrimidine is substituted for a purine
15Point mutations
- Frameshift mutation
- Insertion or deletion of a few nucleotides
causing a reading frame shift and disruption of
translation - Insertion 1 frameshift and deletion -1
frameshift - Often result in complete loss of gene function
16Point Mutation Frameshift
Figure 11.7
17Point Mutation Revertants
- Point mutations are typically reversible
(reversion) - Revertants those strains in which WT phenotype
is restored - True revertants back to original genotype
- Second site revertants (supressor mutations)
response to compensate for mutation - Occur at different site in the DNA
- In same gene?restores enzyme function (frameshift
back) - In another gene?restores phenotype but not enzyme
directly - Replace original enzyme
- Alter original damaged enzyme so that it is
functional - Large scale deletions are nonrevertable
18Other Mutations More Bases
- Large deletions more likely lethal
- Can only be restored by recombination
- Large insertions often inactivate gene
- Can only be reverted by large deletion
- Translocations movement of a large segment from
one area to another (ex. Transposons) - Inversion Orientation of DNA reversed
19Types Of Mutagens
- Chemical
- Nucleotide base analogs faulty base pairing
- Alkalating agents causes changes in base which
causes faulty base pairing - Intercalating agent insertion between DNA
strands which causes insertions and deletions
(ethidium bromide) - Cause frameshift mutations
20(No Transcript)
21Types Of Mutagens
- Radiation Two Types
- Nonionizing causes pyrimidine (thymine) dimers,
which causes problems with replication and
transcription - Ex UV light
- Ionizing
- More energy
- Penetrates through glass
- Ionize water and produce free radicals which
disrupt base pairing by putting breaks in and
damages the DNA - Ex X-rays and Gamma radiation
- Must use at low levels or cell will die
22Nucleotide incision Repair mechanism
- Nucleotide excision and repair of a thymine dimer
- Remove the thymine dimer
- DNA polymerase fills the gap
- Ligase seals the gap
23SOS regulatory system
- Activated as a result of some types of DNA
damage, initiates a number of DNA repair
processes, and error-prone - The repair process introduces mutations
- Does not use a template
24SOS Regulatory System
- SOS regulatory system is repressed by LexA
- LexA is inactivated by RecA
- DNA damage causes the cell to produce RecA
- Distress signal
- One of RecAs functions is as a protease that
destroyed LexA - When RecA inactivates LexA the SOS system is
expressed - SOS system
- umuC and umuD encode DNA polymerase V, which is
error prone (no use of template)
25SOS Regulatory System
Figure 11.10
26Homologous recombination
- Closely related DNA sequences from two distinct
genetic elements are combined in a single element - The greater the distance 2 genes are on a
chromosome the greater the probability for
recombination - New combination of genes increase diversity and
fitness of the microorganisms - Also used in DNA recombinant technology
27- Recombination
- DNA nicked (nuclease)
- Strand separation (helicase)
- Single stranded binding protein binds
- RecA protein binds
- Strand invasion single strand invades recipient
duplex and DNA pairing occurs - Crossover event recipient nicked, crossover and
ligation - Nuclease and polymerase replace mismatched
strands - Resolution cutting and reannealing
Figure 11.13
28Detection rate of recombination
- To detect a change DNA must express a different
phenotype - Antibiotic or nutritional selection
29Genetic exchange in prokaryotes
- Vertical vs. Horizontal
- Donor DNA is transferred to recipient cell in 3
possible ways - Transformation free DNA released from one cell
is taken up by another - Transduction DNA transfer is mediated by a
virus - Conjugation plasmid transfer with cell to cell
contact
30Genetic Exchange
- Recombination has to occur after transfer for
chromosomal change to occur - For transformation and transduction the
transferred DNA cannot be expressed unless it is
within the chromosome - Plasmid DNA can be expressed outside of the
chromosome - Not always a change in genotype or phenotype
31Transformation
- Never a whole chromosome 1-15 kb pieces
- Competence ability of the bacteria to take up
the DNA only certain strains are transformable - Competence can be induced in the laboratory
- Ca treatment
- Electroporation makes holes in the membrane and
force the cells to take up the DNA - Particle gun
32Griffith, Avery, MacLeod, McCartyEvidence for
Transformation
S. pneumoniae phenotype S (capsule) versus R
(no capsule) blue red Kill some S cells and
mix with live R cells?Transformants with S
phenotype
33Transformation
- Binding of DNA
- Double stranded DNA binds best
- Uptake of DNA
- Single strand for most
- Nuclease degrades one strand
- Binding of competence-specific SSBP (protects
from restriction enzymes)
Figure 11.16
34Transformation, continued
- Recombination with the chromosome is mediated by
RecA - Chromosome genetically altered as compared to the
parent cell
Figure 11.16
35Transduction
- Transduction occurs when phage (virus) transfers
DNA - Transducing phage contains only bacterial DNA
virus genes have been removed - It cannot produce progeny phage particles when it
infects a host. - Two types of transduction
- Generalized
- DNA from any part of the host genome transferred
- Specialized
- Specific gene
36Review Phage Infection of Prokaryotic Cell
- Lytic pathway to produce phage progeny
- Lysogenic pathway to pass phage DNA on to new
generations - Prophage
- When induction occurs the phage DNA is spliced
out and replicated so progeny can be produced
37Phage Conversion
- Bacteria exhibit immunity!!!!!
- During prophage a cell cannot be re-infected with
same phage - Change in phenotype
- Some other changes have been observed during
prophage as well - Non-toxin producing strains of Corynebacterium
diphtheriae when infected with phage ß become
toxin producing! - Phage conversion is defined as the phenomenon of
lysogenic phage causing phenotypic changes in
host cell when it is lysogenized.
38Generalized Transduction
- Lytic pathway to produce phage progeny
- Most phage have phage DNA
- By accident, a small of phage have bacterial
DNA - Then, virus infects new cells
- Small release bacterial DNA
- Integrate DNA into host cell homologous
recombination of donor DNA with the bacterial
chromosome
39Specialized Transduction
- Phage genome becomes integrated into the host DNA
at a specific site - Lambda type of virus
- Lamda integrates into the E. coli chromosome
adjacent to a cluster of genes involved in
galactose utilization
40Specialized Transduction
- Lysogenized cell
- Phage DNA integrated into bacterial DNA
- Phage DNA separates from host DNA
- Sometimes, phage DNA is excised with some
bacterial DNA - Phage can transduce galactose genes
41Conjugation Genetic transfer involving cell to
cell contact
- Donor cell
- Contains a conjugative plasmid
- Produces a sex pilus
- F plasmid produces F pilus
- Pili make contact with recipient cell and pull it
closer - Only donor cells produce pili
- Replication and transfer of F plasmid by rolling
circle replication (semiconservative)
42Mechanism of Conjugation