Title: Bacteria as a Model System
1Bacteria as a Model System
- Analysis of Drosophila has led to estimates of
gene sizes which are comparable to those of the
largest known moleculesgenes are nothing less
than a particular kind of molecule except that
their detailed structure is not yet known- Max
Delbrück, On the Nature of Gene Mutation and
Gene Structure, 1935
2Bacteria as a Model System
- 1945 Erwin Schrödingers What is life?
published - How do living organisms order themselves? Do
molecules govern heredity? What is the physical
nature of molecules that govern heredity?
3Bacteria as a Model System
- the obvious inability of present-day physics
and chemistry to account for events taking place
in a living organism is no reason at all for
doubting they can be accounted for by these
sciences - ...likely to involve hitherto unknown other
laws of physics, which, however, once they have
been revealed will form just as integral a part
of this science, as the former.
4Birth of Bacterial Genetics and Molecular
Biology
- Since many.physical scientists were suffering
in the immediate post-war period from a general
professional malaise, they were eager to direct
their efforts toward a new frontier.- Stent - The influx of individuals trained in physics
provided a basis for the revolution in molecular
biology (e.g. Delbrück, Szilard, etc.)
5- Selective media
- missing a nutrient
- containing an antibiotic
- viral exposure
- Phenotypes
- growth characteristics
- colony morphology
6Bacterial Growth Characteristics
- prototroph an organism with wild-type growth
requirements will be able to grow on minimal
medium - auxotroph an organism that will proliferate only
when the media is supplemented with some specific
substance not required by wild-type organisms
7Tonr mutants resistant to T1 phage
8Studies on Bacteria Are changes in growth
characteristics a result of random mutation or
physiological selection?
- 1943 The Delbrück-Luria Fluctuation test
- Designed to determine if variant phenotypes were
due to physiological adaption of the bacterial
cells or to random mutation - test based on a statistical argument...
9Innoculate with 103 cells/ml
Bulk Culture (20 ml)
20 Individual cultures (0.2 ml)
Grow cells to 108 cells/ml
withdraw 0.2 ml sample from bulk culture and
plate on dishes of T1 phage
plate individual 0.2 cultures on dishes
containing T1 phage
Score for resistant cells
10Small variance among samples
11Large variance among samples
12Individual cultures great amount of variation in
number of tonr colonies
Bulk culture all samples show similar numbers of
tonr colonies
13Replica Plating (1952) Joshua and Esther
Lederberg...
14resistant cells are due to random mutation in
original population, NOT physiological selection
15Recombination in BacteriaChapter 14
- How are genes in bacteria organized?
- Are there correlates to eukaryotic chromosomes?
Is there linkage? - How universal are information storage and
retrieval systems in Nature?
16Lederberg and Tatum Experiment (1946)
- Evidence supporting genetic exchange in bacteria
1/107
17B. Davis (1950)
Genetic exchange required physical contact
between the two strains
18W. Hayes (1953) Transfer of information is
unidirectional
Streptomycin treatment prevents cell division
and subsequently kills cells
Recombinants recovered
No recombinants
Donor/recipient relationship strain A Donor
strain B recipient
19Physical Differences between Donor and Recipient
Strains
Donor cell contains a genetic factor that
converts recipient cell to donor status...
20The F Factor
- F cells donor strain
- F- cells recipient strain
- Donor cells contain a genetic entity (F factor)
that determines donor status - F factor must replicated and transferred to
recipient F- cells in culture become F - F factor mediates directed transfer (e.g. genes
for pili formation)
21F factor and chromosome as circles? (to be
discussed...)
- F factor exists as independently replicating
factor (distinct from bacterial chromosome)
- during replication it is transferred to recipient
cell with high frequency
- F- (recipient) cell now converted to F (donor)
cell
N.B. bacterial chromosome not involved in F- to
F conversion... conversion to prototroph (a- to
a) is a low frequency event
22Discovery of Hfr Cells (1950-1953)
- Hayes discovered a strain of cells that could
transfer chromosomal genes at much higher
frequencies than seen in normal F cell
populations Hfr (high frequency of
recombination) strain - Unlike F cells, this strain only transferred
certain genes at high frequency (1000x) - Hfr did not transfer donor status to recipient
cells
23Selection for Hfr Cells
- Wollman and Jacob (1957) different Hfr strains
could be isolated from F populations - Isolation of different Hfr strains could be
accomplished by replica plating and selection...
24Hfr Cells
- Unlike F cells, Hfrs donate specific genes to
recipient cells with high frequency (Hfr high
frequency of recombination) - Unlike F cells, only an extremely small portion
of the F- recipient cell population attains a
donor phenotype. - Wollman and Jacob developed technique to select
for different Hfr strains...
25replica plate
F
F-
Strain A (auxotroph e.g. lac- pro-)
Strain B (auxotroph e.g. met- bio-)
Isolate Hfr from master plate
F x F-
Minimal media plate (select for recombinants)
26Reason for unidirectional transfer of chromosomal
genetic information...
1/1,000 cells an integration event will occur
27- F factor exists as independently replicating
factor - during replication it is transferred to
recipient cell with high frequency - F- (recipient) cell now converted to F (donor)
cell
28Rarely, F factor crosses over into bacterial
chromosome
29Hfr
What is the evidence that both F factor and
bacterial chromosome are circular?
Genetic studies predict that F factor will
contain an origin of replication, fertility genes
(to make pili) and region for pairing with
bacterial chromosome...
30If both are circles, a single x-over integrates
the entire F factor
Hfr
What is the evidence that both F factor and
bacterial chromosome are circular?
Genetic studies predict that F factor will
contain an origin of replication, fertility genes
(to make pili) and region for pairing with
bacterial chromosome...
31Interrupted Mating Experiments
- Start Hfr x F- mating at a precise time
- remove portion of culture...
- disrupt conjugation by shearing conjugation
bridge in a Waring blender and plate on media to
select for recombinants...
32Interrupted Mating Experiments
- e.g. Selection Hfr strs a and F- strr a- cells
are used - exconjugants are plated on streptomycin and
minimal media plate to select for particular
auxotroph - all donor cells will die and only recipients
that are recombinant for wild-type gene will
survive...
33Use strep-resistant recipients to kill off donor
cells...
- Transfer of genes
- genes closest to origin transferred first will
be present in greatest frequency in population
- genes farther away will be transferred to smaller
fraction of cells...
34(No Transcript)
35Time-of-Entry Mapping
36Different integration events determine location
and direction of transfer
37Time of entry mapping experiment data was only
consistent with a circular map
38F' factorswhat goes in can come out...
- F factors can excise from the genome either
precisely or imprecisely - Sometimes imprecise excision can produce F'
factors that contain bacterial genes
- sexduction when the F' factor replicates, it
passes the bacterial gene AND the F factor genes
to recipient cell...
39F' factorswhat goes in can come out...
- F factors can excise from the genome either
precisely or imprecisely - Sometimes imprecise excision can produce F
factors that contain bacterial genes - sexduction when the F' factor replicates, it
passes the bacterial gene(s)AND the F factor
genes to recipient cell...
Merodiploid (partial diploid)