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Title: Microbial Genetic Function
Description: This summary talks about the four main ways that bacteria may transfer their genome/plasmid to others: Transformation Transduction Conjugation Transposition
Description: This summary talks about the four main ways that bacteria may transfer their genome/plasmid to others: Transformation Transduction Conjugation Transposition
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Module: BIOM – 1009
Lecturer: Dr Bonab
Date: 17/11/16
Microbial Genetic Function
o
Bacteria are able to shuffle their genes
...
They will then go
on to start another cycle with another bacterium
Lysogenic cycle
o In this cycle, after the phage has injected the host bacteria, the DNA does
combine with the new DNA
This makes the new genome a prophage
o The bacteria will continue to divide normally by binary fission
It will also replicate the prophage
o Occasionally the prophage my excise from the chromosome, entering
the lytic cycle
Transduction can also be sorted into two types:
Generalised
o After the phage infects the bacterium an enzyme, DNase, cleaves the DNA
contained in the phage so it can be properly enclosed in viral particles
o Most of the time, the new phages are non-transducing
Occasionally, the new phage may pick up some/all of the host
genome and so will infect another bacterium with the host
chromosomes
Specialised
o The DNA from both the host and virus gets incorporated together into a
prophage
This is usually placed at a precise location on the chromosome
o When the viral DNA becomes excised, it usually excises part of the
bacterial genome with it
o When the new phage infects a bacterium, it will contain part of the host
genome (this could be antibiotic resistance)
Conjugation
Conjugation requires direct contact between the donor and recipient cells
It is an important mechanism in both Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria
o In Gram-positive bacteria, the cell walls of each cell stick together using a
conjugation pilus (located on the F plasmid)
o In Gram-negative bacteria, the process is much more complicated
The process is as follows (see below):
The donor bacterium produces a pilus and attaches to the recipient bacterium
DNA helicase then unzips one strand of the plasmid which travels across the
pilus to the recipient
o This begins at a specific site known as the origin of transfer
o The information on this plasmid contains the information for pili
synthesis
Both the donor and recipient will then synthesise a complementary strand to the
plasmid, allowing each organism to have one full copy
The recipient can now become a donor, and so can conjugate with other cells
Plasmids are the most common vectors used in genetic transformation, they contain
three key elements (see bottom):
The origin of replication
A selectable marker gene
o Such as antibiotic resistance
A cloning site
o An area within the plasmid where new DNA is inserted
Title: Microbial Genetic Function
Description: This summary talks about the four main ways that bacteria may transfer their genome/plasmid to others: Transformation Transduction Conjugation Transposition
Description: This summary talks about the four main ways that bacteria may transfer their genome/plasmid to others: Transformation Transduction Conjugation Transposition