Title: Module 1-1 Bacterial Genetics
1Module 1-1Bacterial Genetics
- Organization of bacterial chromosome Prokaryotic
DNA replicate, transcription translation
2Topics
- Bacterial chromosome, structure organization
- Prokaryotic DNA replication, transcription,
translation - Prokaryotic regulation of gene expression
- Mutations and Selection
- Extra-chromosomal elements.
- - Bacteriophages
- - Plasmid DNA
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4 Prokaryote
- the genome of prokaryotes is not in a separate
compartment, haploid. Single chromosome it is
located in the cytoplasm (although sometimes
confined to a particular region called a
nucleoid). Prokaryotes contain no
membrane-bound organelles their only membrane is
the membrane that separates the cell form the
outside world. Nearly all prokaryotes are
unicellular.
Eukaryotes are defined as having their genetic
material enclosed in a membrane-bound nucleus,
separate from the cytoplasm. In addition,
eukaryotes have other membrane-bound organelles
such as mitochondria, lysosomes, and endoplasmic
reticulum. almost all multicellular organisms
are eukaryotes.
5Prokaryote cond..
- Prokaryotes are haploid, and they contain a
single circular chromosome. In addition,
prokaryotes often contain small circular DNA
molecules called plasmids, that confer useful
properties such as drug resistance. Only
circular DNA molecules in prokaryotes can
replicate.
Eukaryotes are often diploid, and eukaryotes have
linear chromosomes, usually more than 1.
6Prokaryote cond..
- In prokaryotes, translation is coupled to
transcription translation of the new RNA
molecule starts before transcription is finished.
In eukaryotes, transcription of genes in RNA
occurs in the nucleus, and translation of that
RNA into protein occurs in the cytoplasm. The
two processes are separated from each other.
7Bacteria
- Bacteria review
- one-celled organisms
- prokaryotes
- reproduce by mitosis
- binary fission
- rapid growth
- generation every 20 minutes
- 108 (100 million) colony overnight!
- dominant form of life on Earth
- incredibly diverse
8Bacterial genome
- Single circular chromosome
- haploid
- naked DNA
- no histone proteins
- 4 million base pairs
- 4300 genes
- 1/1000 DNA in eukaryote
9No nucleus!
- No nuclear membrane
- chromosome in cytoplasm
- transcription translation are coupled together
- no processing of mRNA
- no introns
- but Central Dogma still applies
- use same genetic code
10Bacterial Chromosome
- Molecules of double-stranded DNA
- Usually circular
- Tend to be shorter
- Contains a few thousand unique genes
- Mostly structural genes
- Single origin of replication
11Bacterial Chromosome cond..
- The bacterial chromosome is found in region
called the nucleoid (not membrane-bounded- so the
DNA is in direct contact with the cytoplasm)
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15Bacterial Chromosome cond..
Bacterial Genome is haploid, single chromosome
- The circularity of the bacterial chromosome was
elegantly demonstrated by electron microscopy in
both Gram negative bacteria (such as Escherichia
coli) and Gram positive bacteria (such as
Bacillus subtilis). - Bacterial plasmids were also shown to be
circular. - Linear chromosomes found in Gram-positive
- Borrelia Streptomyces.
Not all bacteria have a single circular
chromosome some bacteria have multiple circular
chromosomes, and many bacteria have linear
chromosomes and linear plasmids.
16Bacterial Chromosome cond..
- Bacterial chromosomal DNA is usually a circular
molecule that is a few million nucleotides in
length - Escherichia coli ? 4.6 million base pairs
- Haemophilus influenzae ? 1.8 million base pairs
- A typical bacterial chromosome contains a few
thousand different genes - Structural gene sequences (encoding proteins)
account for the majority of bacterial DNA - The nontranscribed DNA between adjacent genes are
termed intergenic regions
17Chromosome of E. coli
18Chromosomal Map of Bacteria
Circular genetic map of E coli. Positions of
representative genes are indicated on inner
circle. Distances between genes are calibrated in
minutes, based on times required for transfer
during conjugation. Position of threonine (thr)
locus is arbitrarily designated as 0 minutes, and
other assignments are relative to thr.
19The Complete Sequence of Escherichia coli
Chromosome
20Key features of bacterial chromosomes
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22Compaction
- Typical bacterial chromosome must be compacted
about 1,000-fold - Bacterial DNA is not wound around histone
proteins to form nucleosomes - Proteins important in forming loop domains
- Compacts DNA about 10-fold
- DNA supercoiling
- Topoisomerases twist the DNA and control degree
of supercoiling
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26Comparison of a gene in bacteria
- The length of a typical bacterial operon (usually
about 3 genes), is about as long as the entire
bacterial cell !
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28The Operon Model
The position that a given gene occupies on a
chromosome
The operon model of prokaryotic gene regulation
was proposed by Fancois Jacob and Jacques Monod.
Groups of genes coding for related proteins are
arranged in units known as operons. An operon
consists of an operator, promoter, regulator, and
structural genes. The regulator gene codes for a
repressor protein that binds to the operator,
obstructing the promoter (thus, transcription) of
the structural genes. The regulator does not have
to be adjacent to other genes in the operon. If
the repressor protein is removed, transcription
may occur.
29The Operon Model
Operons are either inducible or repressible
according to the control mechanism. Seventy-five
different operons controlling 250 structural
genes have been identified for E. coli. Both
repression and induction are examples of negative
control since the repressor proteins turn off
transcription.
30The Operon Model
31Extra-chromosomal Elements
- DNA molecules that replicate as discrete genetic
units in bacteria are called replicons. - Extrachromosomal replicons
- - bacteriophages
- - plasmids (non-essential replicons)
- These determine resistance to antimicrobial
agents or production of - virulence factors.
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33- Bacteriophage (from 'bacteria' and Greek f??e??
phagein "to eat") - is any one of a number of viruses that infect
bacteria. The term is commonly used in its
shortened form, phage.
34A plasmid is an extra-chromosomal DNA molecule
separate from the chromosomal DNA which is
capable of replicating independently of the
chromosomal DNA. In many cases, it is circular
and double-stranded. Plasmids usually occur
naturally in bacteria, but are sometimes found in
eukaryotic organisms.
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36Bacteria genetics
37Bacteria have 4 important advantages for
"traditional types of genetic experiments
38Genetic material in Bacteria
39Thank U!!!
40Nucleic Acid
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42Nucleic Acid (DNA RNA)
- Nucleic acids are polynucleotides, consist of
repeating nucleotide units - Each nucleotide contains one phosphate group, one
sugar (pentose - or deoxypentose) and one base (purine or
pyrimidine). - Phosphodiester bonds link the 3'-OH of one
nucleotide sugar to the - 5'-OH group of the adjacent nucleotide
sugar. - In DNA the sugar is D-2-deoxyribose in RNA the
sugar is D-ribose. - RNA has a hydroxyl group on the 2' carbon of
the sugar. - In DNA the purine bases are adenine (A) and
- guanine (G), and the pyrimidine bases are
thymine - (T) and cytosine (C).
- In RNA, uracil (U) replaces thymine.
- Chemically modified purine and pyrimidine bases
- are found in some bacteria and
bacteriophages.
43Nucleic Acid Structure
- DNA is a double-stranded helix two strands are
anti-parallel. - Double helix is stabilized by H bonds between
purine pyrimidine bases on the opposite
strands. A pairs T by 2 H bonds G pairs C by 3
H bonds. - Two strands in DNA helix are complementary, ie.
dsDNA contains equimolar amounts of purines (A
G) and pyrimidines (T C), with A T and G C.
- The mole fraction of G C in DNA varies
widely among different bacteria. - DNA is supercoiled and tightly packaged.
- The extent of sequence homology between DNAs from
different microorganisms determines how closely
related they are (eg. 16sRNA sequence) - RNA exists as a single-stranded molecule forms
hairpin loops (secondary structure) due to
intra-molecular base-pairing.
44- DNA Replication in Bacteria
- The DNA replicates semiconservatively
- - Each strand in dsDNA serves as a
- template for synthesis of a new
- complementary strand.
- - Result daughter dsDNA molecule -
- contains one old polynucleotide strand
- and one newly synthesized strand.
- Replication of chromosomal DNA in
- bacteria starts at a specific chromosomal
- site called the origin of replication and
- proceeds bi-directionally until the process is
- completed.
Autoradiograph of intact replicating chromosome
of E coli. Bacteria were radioactively labeled
with tritiated thymidine
X
Y
.
45- DNA Replication in Bacteria
- DNA replication is initiated whenever cells
divide, so in rapidly - growing bacteria a new round of chromosomal
replication begins - before an earlier round is completed.
- The origin regions specifically and transiently
associate with - the cell membrane after initiation of DNA
replication. Membrane - attachment directs separation of daughter
chromosomes. - Time required for replication of the entire
chromosome is - about 40 minutes (500 1000 nucleotides /
sec) - Replicated chromosomes are partitioned into
each of the - daughter cells.
-
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47Central Dogma of Molecular Biology How does the
sequence of a strand of DNA correspond to the
amino acid sequence of a protein? Â
- DNA codes for RNA production.
- RNA codes for protein production.
- Protein does not code protein, RNA
- or DNA production.
- The end.
- Or in the words of Francis Crick Once
information has passed into - protein, it cannot get out again!
48- Revision of the "Central Dogma"
- CAN go back from RNA to DNA (reverse
transcriptase) -
- RNA can also make copies of itself (RNA
polymerase) - Still NOT possible from Proteins back to RNA or
DNA - Not known mechanisms for proteins making copies
of themselves.
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50- Gene Expression
- Expression of genetic determinants in bacteria
involves the - unidirectional flow of information from DNA to
RNA to - protein.
- Two processes involved are transcription and
translation. -
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51Transcription Translation Prokaryotic vs
Eukaryotic cells In a prokaryotic cell, which
does not contain a nucleus, this process happens
at the same time. In Eukaryotic cells, occur at
different cell compartments.
Prokaryotic cell
Eukaryotic cell
52- Transcription
- The DNA-directed synthesis of RNA is called
transcription. - Transcription produces RNA molecules that are
complimentary - copies of one strand of DNA.
- Only one of the dsDNA strands can serve as
template for - synthesis of a specific mRNA molecule.
- mRNAs transmit information from DNA, and each
mRNA in - bacteria function as a template for synthesis
of one or more - specific proteins.
53- Translation
- The process by which the nucleotide sequence of
an mRNA molecule - determines the primary amino acid sequence of
a protein. - Ribosomes are complexes of ribosomal RNAs
(rRNAs) and several - ribosomal proteins.
- Ribosomes with the aid of transfer RNAs
(tRNAs), amino-acyl tRNA - synthesases, initiation factors and elongation
factors are all involved in - translation of each mRNA into corresponding
polypeptide (protein).
54- Translation
- Initiated at an AUG codon for methionine.
- Codons are translated sequentially in mRNA from
5' to 3'. - The corresponding polypeptide chain / protein is
assembled - from the amino terminus to carboxy terminus.
- The sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide
is, therefore, - co-linear with the sequence of nucleotides in
the mRNA and the - corresponding gene.
55- The Genetic code
- The "universal" genetic code employed by most
organisms is a triplet code and it determines how
the nucleotides in mRNA specify the amino acids
in the polypeptide.
- 61 of 64 possible trinucleotides (codons) encode
specific amino acids. - 3 remaining codons (UAG, UAA or UGA) code for
termination of translation (nonsense codons do
not specify any amino acids) - Exceptions
- UGA as a tryptophan codon in some species of
Mycoplasma and in mitochondrial DNA. - Few codon differences in mitochondrial DNAs from
yeasts, Drosophila, and mammals.
56Gene expression occurs in 2 steps Transcription
of the information encoded in DNA into a molecule
of RNA Translation of the information encoded in
mRNA into a defined sequence of amino acids in a
protein.
57Tutorial
- The sequence of one strand of DNA is
- 5 GGGTAAGCTTATCCCGTA 3
- 3 CCCATTCGAATAGGGCAT 5
- The sequence of the complementary strand from 5
to 3 is - A) CCCATTCGAATAGGGCAT
- B) TACGGGATAAGCTTACCC
- C) GGGTAAGCTTATCCCGTA
- D) ATGCCCTATTCGAATGGG
58- The following is the sense strand of the DNA
sequence. Give the amino acid sequence of the
protein generated - after translation.
- 5 ATGGGGTACTACCATCCCAATCATCCCAATAGGTACCCC 3
- TRANSCRIPTION
- 5 AUGGGGUACUACCAUCCCAAUCAUCCCAAUAGGUACCCC 3
- TRANSLATION
- Met Gly Tyr Tyr His Pro Asn
His Pro Asn Arg Tyr Pro - 5AUG GGG UAC UAC CAU CCC AAU CAU
CCC AAU AGG UAC CCC 3
59References
- Charlebois, R. 1999. Organization of the
Prokaryotic Genome. ASM Press, Washington, D.C. - Casjens, S. 1998. The diverse and dynamic
structure of bacterial genomes. Ann. Rev. Genet.
32 339-377. - Casjens, S. 1999. Evolution of the linear DNA
replicons of the Borrelia spirochetes. Curr.
Opin. Microbiol. 2 529-534. - Chen, C. 1996. http//www.ym.edu.tw/ig/cwc/end_tro
ubles/End_Troubles.html - Jumas-Bilak et al. 1998. Unconventional genomic
organization in the alpha subgroup of the
Proteobacteria. J. Bacteriol. 180 2749-2755. - Kobryn K, Chaconas G. 2001. The circle is broken
telomere resolution in linear replicons. Curr
Opin Microbiol. 4(5) 558-564. - Suwanto, A., and S. Kaplan. 1989. Physical and
genetic mapping of the Rhodobacter sphaeroides
2.4.1 genome presence of two unique circular
chromosomes. J. Bacteriol. 171 5850-5859. - Suwanto, A and S. Kaplan. 1992. Chromosome
transfer in Rhodobacter sphaeroides Hfr
formation and genetic evidence for two unique
circular chromosomes. J. Bacteriol. 174
1135-1145. - Trucksis et al. 1998. The Vibrio cholerae genome
contains two unique circular chromosomes. Proc.
Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 95 14464-14469. - Volff, J.-N., and J. Altenbuchner. 2000. A new
beginning with new ends linearisation of
circular chromosomes during bacterial evolution.
FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 186 143-150. - Yang CC, Huang CH, Li CY, Tsay YG, Lee SC, Chen
CW. 2002. The terminal proteins of linear
Streptomyces chromosomes and plasmids a novel
class of replication priming proteins. Mol
Microbiol. 43(2) 297-305.