Title: Ch 8: Microbial Genetics
1Ch 8 Microbial Genetics
- Genetics The study of what genes are, how they
carry information, how information is expressed,
and how genes are replicated
2Genetics Terms
- Gene A segment of DNA nucleotides that encodes a
functional product, usually a protein - Chromosome Structure containing DNA that
physically carries hereditary information the
chromosomes contain the genes - Genome All the genetic information in a cell
3Genetics Terms
- Genomics The molecular study of genomes
- Genotype The genes of an organism
- Phenotype Expression of the genes
4DNA
- The DNA in a chromosome exists as one long double
helix associated with various proteins that
regulate genetic activity. - Bacterial DNA is circular the chromosome of E.
coli, for example, contains about 4 million base
pairs and is approximately 1000 times longer than
the cell.
5Determine Relatedness
Based on similarity of the viral envelope amino
acids
6Determine Relatedness
- Which strain is more closely related to the
Uganda strain?
7Genetic Map of the Chromosome of E. coli
8The Flow of Genetic Information
- Information contained in the DNA is transcribed
into RNA and translated into proteins.
9The Flow of Genetic Information
10DNA
- Polymer of nucleotides Adenine, thymine,
cytosine, and guanine - Double helix associated with proteins
- "Backbone" is deoxyribose-phosphate
- Strands are held together by hydrogen bonds
between AT and CG - Strands are antiparallel
11Semiconservative Replication
- Because each double-stranded DNA molecule
contains one original and one new strand, the
replication process is called semiconservative.
12DNA Replication
- During DNA replication, the two strands of the
double helix separate at the replication fork, - Each strand is used as a template by DNA
polymerases to synthesize two new strands of DNA
according to the rules of nitrogenous base
pairing. - The result of DNA replication is two new strands
of DNA, each having a base sequence complementary
to one of the original strands.
13DNA Synthesis
14DNA Synthesis
- DNA is copied by DNA polymerase
- In the 5' ? 3' direction
- Initiated by an RNA primer
- Leading strand is synthesized continuously
- Lagging strand is synthesized discontinuously
- Okazaki fragments
- RNA primers are removed and Okazaki fragments
joined by a DNA polymerase and DNA ligase
15DNA Synthesis
- DNA polymerase proofreads new molecules of DNA
and removes mismatched bases before continuing
DNA synthesis. - Each daughter bacterium receives a chromosome
that is virtually identical to the parents.
16Synthesis in the Lab
- Mix DNA polymerase from a bacteria in a test tube
with a human DNA template - The DNA would be most similar to the original
human DNA template with the bacterial DNA
incorporated
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19DNA Synthesis
20Replication of Bacterial DNA
21Replication of Bacterial DNA
ANIMATION DNA Replication Overview
ANIMATION DNA Replication Forming the
Replication Fork
ANIMATION DNA Replication Replication Proteins
22Transcription
- DNA is transcribed to make RNA (mRNA, tRNA, and
rRNA) - Transcription begins when RNA polymerase binds to
the promoter sequence (AUG) - RNA is synthesized from nucleotides containing
the bases A, C, G, and U, which pair with the
bases of the DNA strand being transcribed.
23Transcription
- Transcription proceeds in the 5' ? 3' direction
- Transcription stops when it reaches
theterminator sequence
24Transcription
25The Process of Transcription
26The Process of Transcription
ANIMATION Transcription Overview
ANIMATION Transcription Process
27RNA Processing in Eukaryotes
28Translation
- Translation is the process in which the
information in the nucleotide base sequence of
mRNA is used to dictate the amino acid sequence
of a protein. - mRNA is translated in codons (three nucleotides)
29Translation
- Translation of mRNA begins at the start codon
AUG - Translation ends at nonsense codons UAA, UAG,
UGA
30The Genetic Code
- The genetic code refers to the relationship among
the nucleotide base sequence of DNA, the
corresponding codons of mRNA, and the amino acids
for which the codons code. - 64 sense codons on mRNA encode the 20 amino acids
31The Genetic Code
- 3 are nonsense codons
- The genetic code is degenerate (most amino acids
are coded for by more than one codon) - tRNA carries the complementary anticodon (a base
triplet) - The base pairing of codon and anticodon at the
ribosome results in specific amino acids being
brought to the site of protein synthesis.
ANIMATION Translation Overview
ANIMATION Translation Genetic Code
ANIMATION Translation Process
32The Genetic Code
The start codon, AUG, codes for methionine.
33Simultaneous Transcription Translation
34The Process of Translation
35The Process of Translation
36The Process of Translation
37The Process of Translation
38The Process of Translation
39The Process of Translation
40The Process of Translation
41The Process of Translation
42Regulation
- Regulating protein synthesis at the gene level is
energy-efficient because proteins are synthesized
only as they are needed. - Constitutive genes are expressed at a fixed rate
(Examples are genes for the enzymes in
glycolysis.) - Other genes are expressed only as needed
- Repressible genes
- Inducible genes
- Catabolite repression
43Repression
- Repression controls the synthesis of one or
several (repressible) enzymes. - When cells are exposed to a particular
end-product, the synthesis of enzymes related to
that product decreases - Synthesis of the repressor enzyme is stopped by
the corepressor-repressor binding to the operator
44Induction
- In the presence of certain chemicals (inducers),
cells synthesize more enzymes. This process is
called induction. - An example of induction is the production of
b-galactosidase by E. coli in the presence of
lactose lactose can then be metabolized. - lactose is the substrate that induces the
production
45The Operon Model of Gene Expression
- In bacteria, a group of coordinately regulated
structural genes with related metabolic
functions, plus the promoter and operator sites
that control their transcription, are called an
operon. - When the inducer is absent, the repressor binds
to the operator, and no mRNA is synthesized.
46The Operon Model of Gene Expression
- When the inducer is present, it binds to the
repressor so that it cannot bind to the operator
thus, mRNA is made, and enzyme synthesis is
induced. - In repressible systems, the repressor requires a
corepressor in order to bind to the operator
site thus, the corepressor controls enzyme
synthesis.
47Operon
ANIMATION Operons Overview
48Induction
49Induction
50Repression
51Repression
ANIMATION Operons Induction
ANIMATION Operons Repression
52Catabolite repression
- Allows bacteria to adapt quickly to a preferred
(rapidly metabolisable) carbon and energy source
first - Usually achieved through inhibition of synthesis
of enzymes involved in catabolism of carbon
sources other than the preferred one
53Escherichia coli
- Grows faster on glucose than on any other carbon
source - If E. coli is placed on an agar plate containing
only glucose and lactose, the bacteria will use
glucose first and lactose second - The absence of glucose will "turn off" catabolite
repression
54Catabolite Repression
55- Lactose present, no glucose
56Positive Regulation
- Transcription of structural genes for catabolic
enzymes (such as b-galactosidase) is induced by
the absence of glucose. Cyclic AMP and CRP must
bind to a promoter in the presence of an
alternative carbohydrate. - The presence of glucose inhibits the metabolism
of alternative carbon sources by catabolite
repression.
57Mutation
- A change in the genetic material
- Mutations may be neutral, beneficial, or harmful
- Mutagen Agent that causes mutations (permanent
DNA changes) - Spontaneous mutations Occur in the absence of a
mutagen - Many mutations are neutral, some are
disadvantageous, and others are beneficial.
58Mutation
- Base substitution change in one base by another
base (point mutation) - Result in change in amino acid
59Mutation
- Cause amino acid substitutions) or nonsense
mutations - (which create stop codons).
- Results in a nonsense codon
60Mutation
- Frameshift mutation one or a few base pairs are
deleted or added to DNA.
- Insertion or deletion of one or more nucleotide
pairs
61The Frequency of Mutation
- Spontaneous mutation rate 1 in 109 replicated
base pairs or 1 in 106 replicated genes - Mutagens increase to 105 or 103 per replicated
gene - Occur randomly along a chromosome.
- A low rate of spontaneous mutations is beneficial
in providing the genetic diversity needed for
evolution.
ANIMATION Mutations Types
62Cancer
- Cancerous cells are growing faster than normal
cells - Mutations have a greater effect when a cell is
growing because it is synthesizing DNA and
enzymes. - The probability of a lethal mutation also is
increased in rapidly growing cells.
63Chemical Mutagens
- Include base-pair mutagens, nucleoside analogs,
and frameshift mutagens.
64Chemical Mutagens
ANIMATION Mutagens
65Radiation
- Ionizing radiation (X rays and gamma rays) causes
the formation of ions that can react with
nucleotides and the deoxyribose-phosphate
backbone - Initial effect causes formation of highly
reactive ions in a cell - Base substitutions or breakage of the
sugar-phosphate backbone results.
66Radiation
- UV radiation causes thymine dimers
- Nonionizing it causes bonding between adjacent
thymines. - Can be repaired by enzymes that cut out and
replace the damaged portion of DNA.
67Repair
- Photolyases (light repair enzymes) separate
thymine dimers - Nucleotide excision repair
ANIMATION Mutations Repair
68Selection
- Positive (direct) selection detects mutant cells
because they grow or appear different - Negative (indirect) selection detects mutant
cells because they do not grow - Replica plating used for negative selectionto
detect, for example, - auxotrophs that have nutritional requirements not
possessed by the parent (nonmutated) cell which
is called a prototroph
69Replica Plating
70Interpret Replica Plating
- The colonies are Ampicillin sensitive because the
did not grow on the replica plate containing
Ampicillin. If they did grow, we would classify
them as Ampicillin resistant.
71Ames Test for Chemical Carcinogens
- relatively inexpensive and rapid test for
identifying possible chemical carcinogens.
72Ames Test for Chemical Carcinogens
- assumes that a mutant cell can revert to a normal
cell in the presence of a mutagen and that many
mutagens are carcinogens.
73Genetic Recombination
- Exchange of genes between two DNA molecules
- Usually involves DNA from different organisms
- Contributes to genetic diversity.
- When some of the donors DNA has been integrated
into the recipients DNA, the resultant cell is
called a recombinant.
74Genetic Recombination
- Crossing over occurs when two chromosomes break
and rejoin - Genes from two chromosomes are recombined into
one chromosome containing some genes from each
original chromosome.
75Genetic Recombination
- Vertical gene transfer Occurs during
reproduction between generations of cells. - Horizontal gene transfer The transfer of genes
between cells of the same generation.
ANIMATION Horizontal Gene Transfer Overview
76Genetic Recombination
77Genetic Transformation
- genes are transferred from one bacterium to
another as naked DNA in solution.
ANIMATION Transformation
78Bacterial Conjugation
- Requires contact between living cells
- One type of genetic donor cell is an F
- Recipient cells are F
- F cells contain plasmids called F (fertility)
factors that are transferred to the F- cells
during conjugation
79Conjugation in E. coli
- When the plasmid becomes incorporated into the
chromosome, the cell is called an Hfr (high
frequency of recombination) cell - Conjugation differs from reproduction because it
transfers DNA horizontally to cells in the same
generation
80Conjugation in E. coli
- During conjugation, an Hfr cell can transfer
chromosomal DNA to an F cell. Usually, the Hfr
chromosome breaks before it is fully transferred.
81Conjugation in E. coli
ANIMATION Chromosome Mapping
ANIMATION F Factor
ANIMATION Conjugation Overview
ANIMATION Hfr Conjugation
82Gene Mapping
- Conjugation can be used to map the location of
genes of bacterial chromosomes - The time allowed for conjugation to occur can
help determine the order of the genes - Ex If the F- acquires the ability to synthesize
threonine, the thr gene must be located early in
the chromosome
83Transduction by a Bacteriophage
- DNA is passed from one bacterium to another in a
bacteriophage (virus that infects a bacteria) and
is then incorporated into the recipients DNA - In generalized transduction, any bacterial genes
can be transferred.
84Transduction by a Bacteriophage
ANIMATION Generalized Transduction
ANIMATION Specialized Transduction
85Plasmids
- Plasmids are self-replicating circular molecules
of DNA carrying genes that are not usually
essential for the cells survival. - Conjugative plasmid Carries genes for sex pili
and transfer of the plasmid - Dissimilation plasmids Encode enzymes for
catabolism of unusual compounds - R factors Encode antibiotic resistance
86R (resistance)Factor, a Type of Plasmid
87Transposons
- Segments of DNA that can move from one region of
DNA to another (same or different chromosome) - Contain insertion sequences for cutting and
resealing DNA (transposase) - Complex transposons carry other genes
88Transposons
- Complex transposons can carry any type of gene,
including antibiotic-resistance genes, and are
thus a natural mechanism for moving genes from
one chromosome to another.
89Transposons
ANIMATION Transposons Overview
ANIMATION Transposons Insertion Sequences
ANIMATION Transposons Complex Transposons
90Genes and Evolution
- Diversity is the precondition for evolution
- Mutations and recombination provide diversity
- Fittest organisms for an environment are selected
by natural selection
91Difference Between Prokaryotic Eukaryotic DNA