1 Genetic Transfer in Bacteria
1 Genetic Transfer in Bacteria
1 Genetic Transfer in Bacteria
• Lecture 1
Prokaryotic Genetics
Horizontal gene
transfer in bacteria
Introduction
– Transformation- transfer of gene from one bacterium to other without
cell to cell contact.
• DNA transfer occurs in one direction - from donor to recipient not vice
versa .
Conjugal bridge
F- (recipient)
Fertility plasmid
• The E. coli fertility plasmid is the most extensively studied plasmid.
The relaxase may work alone or in a complex of over a dozen proteins, known
collectively as a relaxosome.
In the F-plasmid system, the relaxase enzyme is called TraI and the relaxosome
consists of TraI, TraD, TraY, TraM, and the Integrated Host Factor, IHF.
The transferred, or T-strand, is unwound from the duplex plasmid and transferred
into the recipient bacterium in a 5'-terminus to 3'-terminus direction.
• The remaining strand is replicated, either independent
of conjugative action (vegetative replication, beginning at the oriV) or in
concert with conjugation (conjugative replication similar to the rolling circle
replication of lambda phage).
Initiates F plasmid
transfer
Helps creating
the ssDNA
conformation
Sterically
prepare the
DNA for other
proteins to
interact in
specific spots.
Conjugation protein assembly
Domains of protein tra I
Bacterial Conjugation:
High Frequency Transfer (Hfr) Cells
Bacterial Conjugation:
High Frequency Transfer of DNA
Different
Alleles
Bacterial Conjugation:
F ´ Transfer
Mapping Gene Position in Bacteria:
Interrupted Conjugation Mapping
r
s
Time Zero
Plate: Selective Meida w/ Streptomycin (no Hfr) and w/o threonine and leucine (no F-
cells that have not received DNA)
s
Mapping Gene Position in Bacteria:
Map Distance is in Minutes
Building a Chromosomal Map:
Several Hfr Strains
Hfr1 Hfr5
Building a Chromosomal Map:
Transfer Alignment