CH 17
CH 17
Bacterial Reproduction
Reproduce asexually However, bacterial reproduction from one cell to another by: Transformation Conjugation Transduction
Plasmids
Extrachromosomal DNA molecule Transmission of plasmid DNA from one bacteria to another- produce new strains (a bacteria type is called a strain Circular molecules with antibiotic resistance genes Genetic exchange can occur between main chromosome and plasmid
Recombination
Unidirectional material flows in one direction Donor strain fragment of chromosome involved in a recombination event Recipient strain - strain that carries intact chromosome Recombination occurs in the recipient strain only Figures 17.1 and 17.2 Donor fragment linear; recipient chromosome circular
Terms
Transformation: donor DNA molecule is taken up from the external environment and incorporated into the genome of the recipient cell Conjugation: direct contact between bacterial cells; DNA from donor to recipient Transduction: DNA goes from one bacteria to another via a phage
Growth of Bacteria
Growth requirements: liquid media or on surface of nutrient media (agar plate)
Example Q: 100 colonies on a plate, diluted the bacterial suspension by a factor of 106, and spread 0.1 ml on an agar plate, what was the concentration of bacteria in the original culture
Answer
100 cells on a plate x 10 (the number of 0.1 ml 6 aliquots in 1 ml) x 10 (the 9 dilution factor) = 1 x 10 cells per ml 6 = 9 100 x 10 x 10 1 x 10
Bacterial Mutants
Antibiotic resistant mutants: can grow on medium that contains antibiotic (amp, strep, tet, pen etc.) sensitive mutants, opposite (cannot grow on antibiotic) Nutritional mutants:
Prototrophic can synthesize own nutrients from minimal media Auxotrophic- need a supplement added to media
Transformation
Cells must be competent (produce competent factor
Calcium chloride Electroporation
Conjugation
Parasexual - mating that involves recombination of genetic information, but there is no meiosis/fertilization/zygote formation Genetic material - goes one way from one organism to another Figure 17.8 - 2 auxotrophs E. coli strains combine to form a phototroph
Conjugation
Mechanism in Figure 17.8? transformation or mating? NOT transformation - DNA from either strain A or B couldnt transform other (remember transformation not normal need competent cells) Proved physical contact between A and B (needed for conjugation)
F+ x F- Mating
Strains one or other - Donor is F+; recipient is F plasmid carries transferring DNA (F factor or fertility factor on plasmid) sex pili - appendages on bacteria surface; attach F+ cell to an F- cell Figure 17.9
Hfr Conjugation
High frequency recombination Strain transfers many chromosomal genes to other strain, but not an F factor see Figure 17.10 F factor integrates into chromosome at several sites facilitates transfer of genes to the recipient strain
Transduction
(Note; skipping section on transduction and gene mapping) mediated by phage (bacterial virus) Virus injects the genes (stored in its capsid) from one bacteria to another) 2 types:
1. Generalized - any part of the bacterial genome can be moved 2. Specialized- restricted segments are transferred
Generalized Transduction
Figure 17.17 U-tube experiments ruled out transformation and conjugation (DNAse and cell contact still produced prototrophs) any gene carried by the virus from one bacteria to another outcome successful (integration into recipient), abortive or unsuccessful
Specialized Transduction
Figure 17.19 example bacteriophage (lambda) Figure 17.18 - lytic and lysogenic cycles lytic- destroys cell lysogenic - integrates into genome (prophage)