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Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages : Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods : Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping : Bacteriophage gene mapping Cis-trans complementation test

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Page 1: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages:

Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation

Transformation

Transduction

Bacteriophage mapping:

Bacteriophage gene mapping

Cis-trans complementation test

Page 2: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Bacteria transfer (or receive) genetic material 3 different ways:

1. Conjugation

2. Transformation

3. Transduction

Transfer of DNA always is unidirectional, and no complete diploid stage forms.

Page 3: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Conjugation:

1. Discovered by Joshua Lederberg and Edward Tatum in 1946.

2. Unidirectional transfer of genetic material between donor and recipient bacteria cells by direct contact.

3. Segment (rarely all) of the donor’s chromosome recombines with the homologous recipient chromosome.

4. Recipients containing donor DNA are called transconjugants.

Page 4: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.2, Lederberg & Tatum (1946) Experiment demonstrating recombination in E. coli. Recombination of 2 complimentary auxotrophs gives rise to a strain that can synthesize all nutrients.

Page 5: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.3, Bernard Davis experiment demonstrated that physical contact is required for bacterial recombination.

Page 6: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Conjugation-transfer of the sex factor F:

1. William Hayes (1953) demonstrated that genetic exchange in E. coli occurs in only one direction.

2. Genetic transfer is mediated by sex factor F.

3. Donor is F+ and recipient is F-.

4. F is a self-replicating, circular DNA plasmid (1/40 the size of the main chromosome).

5. F plasmid contains an origin sequence (O), which initiates DNA transfer. It also contains genes for hair-like cell surface (F-pili or sex-pili), which aid in contact between cells.

6. No conjugation can occur between cells of the same mating type.

7. Conjugation begins when the F plasmid is nicked at the origin, and a single strand is transferred using the rolling circle mechanism.

8. When transfer is complete, both cells are F+ double-stranded.

Page 7: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Figs. 15.4 & 15.5a

Transfer of the F factor

Page 8: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Conjugation of high-frequency recombinant strains:

1. No chromosomal DNA is transferred by standard sex factor F.

2. Transfer of chromosome DNA is facilitated by special strains of F+ integrated into the bacteria chromosome by crossing over.

3. Hfr strains = high frequency recombination strains.

4. Discovered by William Hayes and Luca Cavalli-Sforza.

5. Hfr strains replicate F factor as part of their main chromosome.

6. Conjugation in Hfr strains begins when F+ is nicked at the origin, and F+ and bacteria chromosomal DNA are transferred using the rolling circle mechanism.

7. Complete F+ sequence (or complete chromosomal DNA) is rarely transferred (1/10,000) because bacteria separate randomly before DNA synthesis completes.

8. Recombinants are produced by crossover of the recipient chromosome and donor DNA containing F+.

Page 9: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.5b

Transfer of the Hfr F+ factor

Page 10: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.6

Excision of the F+ factor also occurs spontaneously at low frequency.

1. Begin with Hfr cell containing F+.

2. Small section of host chromosome also may be excised, creating an F ’ plasmid.

3. F ’ plasmid is named for the gene it carries, e.g., F ’ (lac)

Page 11: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Using conjugation to map bacterial genes:

1. Begin with two different Hfr strains selected from F+ x F- crosses and perform an interrupted mating experiment.

2. HfrH thr+ leu+ aziR tonR lac+ gal+ strR

F- thr leu aziS tons lac gal strS

• Mix 2 cell types in medium at 37°C.

• Remove at experimental time points and agitate to separate conjugating pairs.

• Analyze recombinants with selective media.

• Order in which genes are transferred reflects linear sequence on chromosomes and time in media.

• Frequency of recombinants declines as donor gene enters recipient later.

Page 12: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.7

Interrupted mating experiment

Page 13: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.7b

Page 14: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.7c, Genetic map-results of interrupted E. coli mating experiment.

Page 15: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Generating a map for all of E. coli:

1. Location and orientation of the Hfr F+ in the circular chromosome varies from strain to strain.

2. Overlap in transfer maps from different strains allow generation of a complete chromosomal map.

Fig. 15.8

Page 16: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Circular genetic map of E. coli

Total map units = 100 minutes

Time required for E. coli chromosome to replicate at 37°C.

Page 17: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Transformation:

1. Unidirectional transfer of extracellular DNA into cells, resulting in a phenotypic change in the recipient.

2. First discovered by Frederick Griffith (1928).

3. DNA from a donor bacteria is extracted and purified, broken into fragments, and added to a recipient strain.

4. Donor and recipient have different phenotypes and genotypes.

5. If recombination occurs, new recombinant phenotypes appear.

Page 18: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

More about transformation:

1. Bacteria vary in their ability to take up DNA.

2. Bacteria such as Bacillus subtilis take up DNA naturally.

3. Other strains are engineered (i.e., competent cells).

4. Competent cells are electroporated or treated chemically to induce E. coli to take up extracellular DNA.

Page 19: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.9, Transformation of Bacillus subtilus

Heteroduplex DNA

Page 20: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Mapping using transformation:

1. Recombination frequencies are used to infer gene order.

p+ q+ o+ x p q o

2. If p+ and q+ frequently cotransform, order is p-q-o.

3. If p+ and o+ frequently cotransform, order is p-o-q.

Page 21: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Transduction:

1. Bacteriophages (bacterial viruses) transfer genes to bacteria (e.g., T2, T4, T5, T6, T7, and ).

1. Generalized transduction transfers any gene.

1. Specialized transduction transfers specific genes.

2. Phages typically carry small amounts of DNA, ~1% of the host chromosome.

3. Viral DNA undergoes recombination with homologous host chromosome DNA.

Page 22: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.12

Life cycle of phage

Page 23: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.13

Generalized transduction of E. coli by phage P1

Page 24: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Transduction mapping is similar to transformation mapping:

Gene order is determined by frequency of recombinants.

If recombination rate is high, genes are far apart.

If recombination rate is low, genes are close together.

Page 25: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Mapping genes of bacteriophages (see Fig. 15.15):

1. Infect bacteria with phages of different genotypes using two-, three-, or four-gene crosses crossover.

2. Count recombinant phage phenotypes by determining differences in cleared areas (no bacteria growth) on a bacterial lawn.

3. Different phage genes induce different types of clearing (small/large clearings with fuzzy/distinct borders).

Page 26: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.16 & 15.17

Page 27: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fine structure gene-mapping of bacteriophages:

Same principles of intergenic mapping also can be used to map mutation sites within the same gene, intragenic mapping.

1. First evidence that the gene is sub-divisible came from C. P. Oliver ‘s (~1940) work on Drosophila.

2. Seymour Benzer’s (1950-60s) study of the rII region of bacteriophage T4.

Page 28: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Seymour Benzer’s (1950-60s) study of the rII region of T4:

1. Studied 60 independently isolated rII mutants crossed in all possible combinations.

2. Began with two types of traits: plaque morphology and host range property.

1. Growth in permissive host E. coli B; all four phage types grow.

1. Growth in non-permissive host E. coli K12(); rare r+ recombinants grow (rare because the mutations are close to each other and crossover is infrequent).

• Benzer studied 3000 rII mutants showing nucleotide deletions at different levels of subdivision (nested analyses).

• Was able to map to T4 to level equivalent to 3 bp (the codon).

• Ultimately determined that the rII region is sub-divisible into >300 mutable sites by series of nested analyses and comparisons.

Page 29: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Benzer identified recombinants of two rII mutants of T4 using different strains of E. coli.

Page 30: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.18, Benzer’s map of the rII region generated from crosses of 60 different mutant T4 strains.

Page 31: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.19

Benzer’s deletion analysis of the rII region of T4:

No recombinants can be produced if mutant strain lacks the region containing the mutation.

Page 32: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 18.20 (2nd edition), Benzer’s deletion map divided the rII region into 47 segments.

Page 33: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.20, Benzer’s composite map of the rII region indicating >300 mutable sites on two different genes.

Small squares indicate point mutations mapping to a given site.

Page 34: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Seymour Benzer’s cis-trans complementation test:

1. Used to determine the number of functional units (genes) defined by a given set of mutations, and whether two mutations occur on the same unit or different units.

2. If two mutants carrying a mutation of different genes combine to create a wild type function, two mutations compliment.

3. If two mutants carrying a mutation of the same gene create a mutant phenotype, mutations do not compliment.

Page 35: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Fig. 15.21, Seymour Benzer’s cis-trans complementation test.

Page 36: Chapter 15 - Genetics of Bacteria and Bacteriophages: Mapping bacteria, 3 different methods: Conjugation Transformation Transduction Bacteriophage mapping:

Example of complementation in Drosophila