22. Recombination II Flashcards
1
Q
what is transduction?
A
- transfer of bacterial genes from bacteria to bacteria by viruses
- bacterial genes incorperated into phage capsid
– due to errors in phage life cycle - phage containing these genes injects into another bacterium
– completing transfer
2
Q
what is the beginning process of transudction?
A
- phage attaches to host cell and injects its DNA
– into bacterial chromosome - phage DNA circularises
- certain factors determine next stage:
– lytic cycle (induced)
– lysogenic cycle (entered)
3
Q
what is the process of transduction for the lytic cycle?
A
- induced cycle
- new phage DNA and proteins synthesised
– assembled into phages - cell lyses
– releasing phages - restarts cycle when phage attaches to host cell
4
Q
what is the process of transduction for the lysogenic cycle?
A
- phage DNA integrates into bacterial chromosome
– becomes prophage - bacterium reproduces normally
– copying prophage and transmitting it to daughter cells
– many cell divisions produce large population of infected bacteria - occasionally, prophage exits bacterial chromosome
– initiates lytic cycle
5
Q
what are the different kinds of transduction?
A
- generalised transduction
- specialised transduction
6
Q
what is generalised transduction?
A
- occurs during lytic cycle of phages
– can transfer any part of bacterial genome - during assembly stage, when viral chromosome are packages into protein capsids
– random fragments of partially digested bacterial chromosome may also be packages by mistake - becuase capsid can only contain certain amount of DNA
– phage DNA is left behind - resulting virus particle often injects DNA ino another bacterial cell
– does not induce another lytic cycle - through homologous recombination
– DNA incorporated into recipient chromosome
– cell is now transformed (recombinant)
7
Q
what is the process of generalised transduction?
A
- infection
- destruction of bacteria’s DNA
- replication of viral genome
- production of viral parts
- packaging
- lysis
8
Q
what is specialised transduction?
A
- transducing particle carries only specific portions of bacterial genome
- made possibly by error in lysogenic life cycle of temperate phage
- prophage is induced to leave host chromosome
– excision somtimes carries out improperly - resulting genome caries portion (10-15%) of bacterial chromosome
- transducing particle will inject bacterial genes into another bacterium
– may become stably incorporated
9
Q
what is the process of specialised transduction?
A
- temperate phage
– reproduced in every round of binary fission
– part of bacteria’s DNA - replication of viral genome
- production of viral parts
- packaging
- lysis
10
Q
what is conjugation?
A
- transfer of genetic information by direct contact
– cell-to-cell contact - examples:
– F+ x F- Mating
– Hfr (high frequency) conjugation
— requires fertility factors that are stably integrated into chromome of F+ cell
11
Q
what is F+ x F- conjugation?
A
- donor (F+)
- recipient (F-)
- gene transfer in nonreciprocal
- during F+ x F- conjugation
– F facor replicates by roling circle replication
– copy moves to recipient - entering strand replicated to produce double stranded DNA
- bacterial chromosomal genes rarely transferred using this mechanism
12
Q
what is the process of F+ x F- conjugation?
A
- donor cell attaches to recipient with pilus
– pilus draws cells together - cells contact one another
- one strand of plasmid DNA transfers to recipient
- recipient synthesises complementary strand
– becomes and F+ cell
– donor synthesises complementary strand restoring to complete plasmid
13
Q
what is Hfr conjugation?
A
- homologous recombination of (Hfr) strains
– between sequence present on both plasmid and chromosome
— when integrated, F plasmid’s tra operon still functional
— can direct synthesis of pili, carry out rolling circle replication, transfer genetic material to F- recipient cell - chromosomally integrated F factor
– integreates into bacterial chromosome at several locations
— still carries all genes required to allow formation of pilus - donor strains transfer bacterial genes with great efficiency
– do not change recipients into donors - very high efficiency of chromosomal gene transfer
– in comparison with F+ cells
14
Q
what is the process of Hfr conjugation?
A
- F plasmid integrates into chromosome by recombination
- cells join via a conjugation pilus
- portion of F plasmid partially moves into recipient cell
– trailing a strand of donor’s DNA - conjugation ends with pieces of F plasmid and donor DNA in recipient cell
– cells synthesis complementary DNA strands - donor DNA and recipient DNA recombine
– making a recombinant F- cell
15
Q
how does Hfr conjugation work?
A
- DNA transfer begins when integrated F factor is nicked at is site of transfer origin
- as replicated, chromosome moves through the pilus (conjugation bridge)
– joining donor and recipient cells - only part of F factor is transferred at start (initial break is within F factor)
– F- recipient does not become F+
– unless whole chromosome transferred, requiring approx. 100 min. Thus complete F factor not usually transferred. - after replicated donor chromosome enters recipient cell
– may be degraded or incorporated in F- chromosome - Hfr conjugation
– most efficient natural mehanism of gene transfer between bacteria