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Chapter 7 Microbial Genetics.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 7 Microbial Genetics."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 7 Microbial Genetics

2 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
Genetics Study of inheritance and inheritable traits as expressed in an organism’s genetic material Genome The entire genetic complement of an organism Includes its genes and nucleotide sequences © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 2

3 Figure 7.1 The structure of nucleic acids-overview

4 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
The Structure of Prokaryotic Genomes Prokaryotic chromosomes Main portion of DNA, along with associated proteins and RNA Prokaryotic cells are haploid (single chromosome copy) Typical chromosome is circular molecule of DNA in nucleoid © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 4

5 Figure 7.2 Bacterial genome-overview

6 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
The Structure of Prokaryotic Genomes Plasmids Small molecules of DNA that replicate independently Not essential for normal metabolism, growth, or reproduction Can confer survival advantages Many types of plasmids Fertility factors Resistance factors Bacteriocin factors Virulence plasmids © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 6

7 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
The Structure of Eukaryotic Genomes Nuclear chromosomes Typically have more than one chromosome per cell Chromosomes are linear and sequestered within nucleus Eukaryotic cells are often diploid (two chromosome copies) © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 7

8 Figure 7.3 Eukaryotic nuclear chromosomal packaging-overview

9 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
The Structure of Eukaryotic Genomes Extranuclear DNA of eukaryotes DNA molecules of mitochondria and chloroplasts Resemble chromosomes of prokaryotes Only code for about 5% of RNA and proteins Some fungi and protozoa carry plasmids © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 9

10 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
DNA Replication Anabolic polymerization process that requires monomers and energy Triphosphate deoxyribonucleotides serve both functions Key to replication is complementary structure of the two strands Replication is semiconservative New DNA composed of one original and one daughter strand © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 10

11 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
ANIMATION DNA Replication: Overview © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 11

12 Figure 7.4 Triphosphate deoxyribonucleotides as building blocks and energy sources in DNA synthesis-overview

13 Figure 7.5 Semiconservative model of DNA replication
Original DNA First replication Second replication Original strand New strands

14 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
DNA Replication Initial processes in replication Bacterial DNA replication begins at the origin DNA polymerase replicates DNA only 5 to 3 Because strands are antiparallel, new strands are synthesized differently Leading strand synthesized continuously Lagging strand synthesized discontinuously © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 14

15 Figure 7.6a DNA replication: initial processes
Chromosomal proteins (histones in eukaryotes and archaea) removed DNA polymerase III Replication fork DNA helicase Stabilizing proteins Initial processes

16 Figure 7.6b DNA replication: synthesis of leading strand
Primase Replication fork Leading strand P + P Triphosphate nucleotide RNA primer Synthesis of leading strand

17 Figure 7.6c DNA replication: synthesis of lagging strand
Replication fork Triphosphate nucleotide RNA primer Okazaki fragment Lagging strand DNA ligase Primase DNA polymerase III DNA polymerase I Synthesis of lagging strand

18 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
ANIMATION DNA Replication: Forming the Replication Fork © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 18

19 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
ANIMATION DNA Replication: Replication Proteins © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 19

20 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
ANIMATION DNA Replication: Synthesis © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 20

21 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
DNA Replication Other characteristics of bacterial DNA replication Bidirectional Topoisomerases remove supercoils in DNA molecule DNA is methylated Control of genetic expression Initiation of DNA replication Protection against viral infection Repair of DNA © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 21

22 Figure 7.7 The bidirectionality of DNA replication
Origin Parental strand Replication forks Daughter strand Replication proceeds in both directions Termination of replication

23 The Structure and Replication of Genomes
DNA Replication Replication of eukaryotic DNA Similar to bacterial replication Some differences Uses four DNA polymerases Thousands of replication origins Shorter Okazaki fragments Plant and animal cells methylate only cytosine bases © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 23

24 The Relationship Between Genotype and Phenotype
Gene Function The Relationship Between Genotype and Phenotype Genotype Set of genes in the genome Phenotype Physical features and functional traits of the organism © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 24

25 The Transfer of Genetic Information
Gene Function The Transfer of Genetic Information Transcription Information in DNA is copied as RNA Translation Polypeptides synthesized from RNA Central dogma of genetics DNA transcribed to RNA RNA translated to form polypeptides © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 25

26 Figure 7.8 The central dogma of genetics
DNA (genotype) Transcription mRNA Translation by ribosomes NH2 Methionine Arginine Tyrosine Leucine Polypeptide Phenotype

27 Gene Function ANIMATION Transcription: Overview 27
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 27

28 Gene Function ANIMATION Translation: Overview 28
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 28

29 The Events in Transcription
Gene Function The Events in Transcription Four types of RNA transcribed from DNA RNA primers mRNA rRNA tRNA Occur in nucleoid of prokaryotes Three steps Initiation Elongation Termination © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 29

30 Figure 7.9 Transcription-overview
RNA polymerase attaches nonspecifically to DNA and travels down its length until it recognizes a promoter sequence. Sigma factor enhances promoter recognition in bacteria. RNA polymerase DNA Promoter Sigma factor Terminator Attachment of RNA polymerase Upon recognition of the promoter, RNA polymerase unzips the DNA molecule beginning at the promoter. “Bubble” Template DNA strand Unzipping of DNA, movement of RNA polymerase Initiation of transcription “Bubble” Triphosphate ribonucleotides align with their DNA complements and RNA polymerase links them together, synthesizing RNA. No primer is needed. The triphosphate ribonucleotides also provide the energy required for RNA synthesis. Growing RNA molecule (transcript) Template DNA strand Elongation of the RNA transcript Promoter Terminator RNA transcript released Self-termination: transcription of DNA terminator sequences causes the RNA to fold, loosening the grip of polymerase on DNA. Enzyme-dependent termination: Rho pushes between polymerase and DNA, releasing polymerase, RNA transcript and Rho. RNA polymerase Rho termination protein Rho protein moves along RNA C-G rich hairpin loop Template strand Termination of transcription

31 Gene Function ANIMATION Transcription: The Process 31
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 31

32 Figure 7.10 Concurrent RNA transcription
RNA polymerases Promoter Sigma factor Template DNA strand RNA

33 The Events in Transcription
Gene Function The Events in Transcription Transcriptional differences in eukaryotes RNA transcription occurs in the nucleus Transcription also occurs in mitochondria and chloroplasts Three types of RNA polymerases Numerous transcription factors mRNA processed before translation Capping Polyadenylation Splicing © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 33

34 Figure 7.11 Eukaryotic mRNA
Exons (polypeptide coding regions) Template DNA strand Introns (noncoding regions) Transcription Exon 1 Exon 2 Exon 3 Pre-mRNA 5´ cap Intron 1 Intron 2 Intron 3 Poly-A tail Intron 1 Processing Spliceosomes 3´ mRNA splicing Exon 1 Exon 3 Exon 2 mRNA (codes for one polypeptide) Nuclear envelope Nucleoplasm Nuclear pore Cytosol mRNA

35 Gene Function Translation
Process where ribosomes use genetic information of nucleotide sequences to synthesize polypeptides © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 35

36 Figure 7.12 The genetic code

37 Gene Function ANIMATION Translation: Genetic Code 37
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 37

38 Gene Function Translation Participants in translation Messenger RNA
Transfer RNA Ribosomes and ribosomal RNA © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 38

39 Figure 7.13 Prokaryotic mRNA
Promoter Gene 1 Gene 2 Gene 3 Terminator 5´ Template DNA strand Transcription Start codon AUG Start codon AUG Start codon AUG UAA UAG UAA 3´ mRNA 3´ mRNA Ribosome binding site (RBS) Stop codon RBS Stop codon RBS Stop codon Untranslated mRNA Translation Polypeptide 1 Polypeptide 2 Polypeptide 3

40 Figure 7.14 Transfer RNA-overview

41 Figure 7.15 Prokaryotic ribosomes-overview

42 Figure 7.16 Transfer RNA binding sites in a ribosome
tRNA- binding sites Large subunit Large subunit E site P site A site Nucleotide bases mRNA Small subunit Small subunit mRNA Prokaryotic ribosome (angled view) attached to mRNA Prokaryotic ribosome (schematic view) showing tRNA-binding sites

43 Gene Function Translation Three stages of translation
Initiation Elongation Termination All stages require additional protein factors Initiation and elongation require energy (GTP) © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 43

44 Figure 7.17 The initiation of translation in prokaryotes
Initiator tRNA Large ribosomal subunit tRNAfMet Anticodon mRNA Start codon E P A P A P A Small ribosomal subunit Initiation complex

45 Figure 7.18 The elongation stage of translation-overview
Peptide bond E E P A P A Movement of ribosome one codon toward 3´ end E P A E P A E P A Two more cycles Growing polypeptide E P A

46 Figure 7.19 A polyribosome in a prokaryotic cell-overview

47 Gene Function Translation Stages of translation Termination
Release factors recognize stop codons Modify ribosome to activate ribozymes Ribosome dissociates into subunits Polypeptides released at termination may function alone or together © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 47

48 Gene Function Translation Translation differences in eukaryotes
Initiation occurs when ribosomal subunit binds to 5 guanine cap First amino acid is methionine rather than f-methionine © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 48

49 Regulation of Genetic Expression
Gene Function Regulation of Genetic Expression 75% of genes are expressed at all times Other genes transcribed and translated when cells need them Allows cell to conserve energy Regulation of protein synthesis Typically halts transcription Can stop translation directly © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 49

50 Regulation of Genetic Expression
Gene Function Regulation of Genetic Expression Control of translation Genetic expression can be regulated at level of translation Riboswitch mRNA molecule that blocks translation of the polypeptide it encodes Short interference RNA (siRNA) RNA molecule complementary to a portion of mRNA, tRNA, or a gene that binds and renders the target inactive © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 50

51 Regulation of Genetic Expression
Gene Function Regulation of Genetic Expression Nature of prokaryotic operons An operon consists of a promoter and a series of genes Some operons are controlled by a regulatory element called an operator © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 51

52 Figure An operon Operon Promoter Operator Structural genes Regulatory gene 1 2 3 4 5´ Template DNA strand

53 Regulation of Genetic Expression
Gene Function Regulation of Genetic Expression Nature of prokaryotic operons Inducible operons must be activated by inducers Lactose operon Repressible operons are transcribed continually until deactivated by repressors Tryptophan operon © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 53

54 Gene Function ANIMATION Operons: Overview 54
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 54

55 Figure 7.21 The lac operon-overview

56 Figure 7.22 CAP-cAMP enhances lac transcription
cAMP bound to CAP RNA polymerase Transcription proceeds CAP binding site Promoter Operator lac genes

57 Gene Function ANIMATION Operons: Induction 57
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 57

58 Figure 7.23 The trp operon-overview

59 Gene Function ANIMATION Operon: Repression 59
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 59

60 Mutations of Genes Mutation
Change in the nucleotide base sequence of a genome Rare event Almost always deleterious Rarely leads to a protein that improves ability of organism to survive © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 60

61 Mutations of Genes Types of Mutations Point mutations
Most common One base pair is affected Insertions, deletions, and substitutions Frameshift mutations Nucleotide triplets after the mutation are displaced Insertions and deletions © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 61

62 Figure 7.24 Effects of the various types of point mutations-overview

63 Mutations of Genes Mutagens Radiation Chemical mutagens
Ionizing radiation Nonionizing radiation Chemical mutagens Nucleotide analogs Disrupt DNA and RNA replication Nucleotide-altering chemicals Result in base-pair substitutions and missense mutations Frameshift mutagens Result in nonsense mutations © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 63

64 Mutations of Genes ANIMATION Mutagens © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 64

65 Figure 7.25 A pyrimidine (thymine) dimer
Ultraviolet light Thymine dimer

66 Figure 7.26 The structure and effects of nucleotide analogs-overview

67 Figure 7.27 The action of a frameshift mutagen
Normal DNA Acridine Replication Deletion Insertion Daughter DNA

68 Mutations of Genes Frequency of Mutation Mutations are rare events
Otherwise organisms could not effectively reproduce Mutagens increase the mutation rate by a factor of 10 to 1000 times © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 68

69 Mutations of Genes ANIMATION Mutations: Repair 69
© 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 69

70 Figure 7.28 DNA repair mechanisms-overview

71 Identifying Mutants, Mutagens, and Carcinogens
Mutations of Genes Identifying Mutants, Mutagens, and Carcinogens Mutants Descendants of a cell that does not repair a mutation Wild types Cells normally found in nature Methods to recognize mutants Positive selection Negative (indirect) selection Ames test © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 71

72 Figure 7.29 Positive selection of mutants-overview

73 Figure 7.30 Negative (indirect) selection-overview
Inoculate bacteria onto complete medium containing tryptophan. Mutagen Bacterial suspension Incubation Bacterial colonies grow. A few may be tryptophan auxotrophs. Most are wild types. Stamp sterile velvet onto plate, picking up cells from each colony. Sterile velvet surface Bacteria Stamp replica plates with velvet. Complete medium containing tryptophan Medium lacking tryptophan Incubation Identify auxotroph as colony growing on complete medium but not on lacking medium. All colonies grow. Tryptophan auxotroph cannot grow. Inoculate auxotroph colony into complete medium.

74 Medium lacking histidine Colony of revertant (his+) Salmonella
Figure The Ames test Experimental tube Control tube Liver extract Suspected mutagen Liver extract Culture of his– Salmonella Medium lacking histidine Incubation Colony of revertant (his+) Salmonella No growth

75 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
Exchange of nucleotide sequences often mediated by homologous sequences Recombinants Cells with DNA molecules that contain new nucleotide sequences Vertical gene transfer Organisms replicate their genomes and provide copies to descendants © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 75

76 Figure 7.32 Genetic recombination
Homologous sequences DNA A DNA B Enzyme nicks one strand of DNA at homologous sequence. A B Recombination enzyme inserts the cut strand into second molecule, which is nicked in the process. Ligase anneals nicked ends in new combinations. Molecules resolve into recombinants. Recombinant A Recombinant B

77 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
Horizontal Gene Transfer Among Prokaryotes Horizontal gene transfer Donor cell contributes part of genome to recipient cell Three types Transformation Transduction Bacterial conjugation © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 77

78 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
Horizontal Gene Transfer Among Prokaryotes Transformation One of conclusive pieces of proof that DNA is genetic material Cells that take up DNA are competent Results from alterations in cell wall and cytoplasmic membrane that allow DNA to enter cell © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 78

79 Figure 7.33 Transformation in Streptococcus pneumoniae-overview

80 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Transformation © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 80

81 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
Horizontal Gene Transfer Among Prokaryotes Transduction Generalized transduction Transducing phage carries random DNA segment from donor to recipient Specialized transduction Only certain donor DNA sequences are transferred © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 81

82 Figure 7.34 Transduction-overview
Bacteriophage Host bacterial cell (donor cell) Bacterial chromosome Phage injects its DNA. Phage enzymes degrade host DNA. Phage DNA Phage with donor DNA (transducing phage) Cell synthesizes new phages that incorporate phage DNA and, mistakenly, some host DNA. Transducing phage Recipient host cell Transducing phage injects donor DNA. Transduced cell Donor DNA is incorporated into recipient’s chromosome by recombination. Inserted DNA

83 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Transduction: Generalized Transduction © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 83

84 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Transduction: Specialized Transduction © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 84

85 Figure 7.35 Bacterial conjugation-overview
F plasmid Origin of transfer Conjugation pilus Chromosome Donor cell attaches to a recipient cell with its pilus. F+ cell F– cell Pilus may draw cells together. One strand of F plasmid DNA transfers to the recipient. Pilus The recipient synthesizes a complementary strand to become an F+ cell with a pilus; the donor synthesizes a complementary strand, restoring its complete plasmid. F+ cell F+ cell

86 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Conjugation: Overview © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 86

87 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Conjugation: F Factor © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 87

88 Figure 7.36 Conjugation involving an Hfr cell-overview
Donor chromosome Pilus F+ cell F plasmid integrates into chromosome by recombination. Hfr cell Pilus Cells join via a conjugation pilus. F+ cell (Hfr) F– recipient F plasmid Donor DNA Part of F plasmid Portion of F plasmid partially moves into recipient cell trailing a strand of donor’s DNA. Incomplete F plasmid; cell remains F– Conjugation ends with pieces of F plasmid and donor DNA in recipient cell; cells synthesize complementary DNA strands. Donor DNA and recipient DNA recombine, making a recombinant F– cell. Recombinant cell (still F–)

89 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Conjugation: Hfr Conjugation © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 89

90 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Conjugation: Chromosome Mapping © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 90

91 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
Transposons and Transposition Transposons Segments of DNA that move from one location to another in the same or different molecule Result is a kind of frameshift insertion (transpositions) Transposons all contain palindromic sequences at each end © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 91

92 Figure 7.37 Transposition-overview

93 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Transposons: Overview © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 93

94 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
Transposons and Transposition Simplest transposons Insertion sequences Have no more than two inverted repeats and a gene for transposase Complex transposons Contain one or more genes not connected with transposition © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 94

95 Figure 7.38 Transposons-overview

96 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Transposons: Insertion Sequences © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 96

97 Genetic Recombination and Transfer
ANIMATION Transposons: Complex Transposons © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. 97


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