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Unit 3c. Microbial Genetics. Microbial Genetics. Genetics : the science of heredity Genome : the genetic information in the cell Genomics : the sequencing and molecular characterization of genomes. Gregor Mendel Grew pea plants f rom 1856-1863. Genetics : the science of heredity
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Unit 3c Microbial Genetics
Microbial Genetics Genetics: the science of heredity Genome: the genetic information in the cell Genomics: the sequencing and molecular characterization of genomes • Gregor Mendel • Grew pea plants from 1856-1863. • Genetics: the science of heredity • Genome: the genetic information in the cell • Genomics: the sequencing and molecular characterization of genomes
A cell’s genome includes Plasmids • Chromosomes and _________ • Chromosomes are structures containing the DNA
A bacterium has a single circular chromosome consisting of a single circular molecule of DNA
Plasmids (review) • small loops of extrachromosomal DNA in bacteria • often carry genes for virulence, bacteriocins (toxic proteins that kill other bacteria) or drug resistance (codes for enzymes that inactivate certain drugs or toxic substances) • can recombine into new combinations • transmitted from organism to organism
DNA • Fig. 2.16 Nucleotides
“Genes” • Segments of DNA (except in some viruses, in which they are made of RNA) that code for functional products DNA
each gene could be several thousand or more base pairs long. • E. coli approximately 4,300 genes (4.6 million base pairs • Humans have approximately 20,000 to 25,000 genes. • Based on Human Genome Project
Nucleic Acids • DNA and RNA • DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid • RNA: ribonucleic acid • Messenger RNA (mRNA) • Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) • Transfer RNA (tRNA) • Nucleotides are the structural units of nucleic acids
Nucleotides (Review) • a nucleic acid is a long chain of nucleotides • each nucleotide has 3 parts: • a 5-carbon ________ • ribose in RNA • deoxyribose in DNA • A __________ group • a ___________ base Sugar Phosphate Nitrogenous
Nucleic acids • RNA: usually a single chain of nucleotides (may be double in viruses)
DNA: usually a double chain of nucleotides (may be single in viruses) • 2 kinds of base pairs:
Nucleotides Complementary Base Pair • Nucleotide bases bind to each other in a specific manner = complementary base pairing. • Specific purines complementary base pair with specific pyrimidines. Complementary base pairing in DNA
DNA • Double helix of James Watson and Frances Crick
Review of Proteins: • long chains of amino acids: hundreds of amino acids in complex three-dimensional arrangements • there are 20 naturally occurring kinds of amino acids • each amino acid in a protein must be exactly the right kind of amino acid or it will be a different protein
the function of a gene is to determine the sequence of the amino acids to make a specific protein
The genetic code • The set of rules that determine how a nucleotide sequence is converted into the amino acid sequence • along a mRNA, groups of 3 consecutive nucleotides is a codon, the genetic code for one amino acid • e. g. —P—R—P—R—P—R— l l l U A C • 64 possible mRNA codons for 20 amino acids • there can be up to 6 codons that specify the same amino acid • a few codons specify NO amino acid (start or stop codons),signal the end of the protein molecule’s synthesis
1) DNA replication • reproduction of a molecule • basis of continuity of life • molecule “unzips” along the hydrogen bonds • each half attracts the nucleotides needed to recreate the other half • if successful, both new molecules are identical to the original and to each other
DNA Replication DNA Polymerase– Enzyme that connects each nucleotide together 3’ 5’ DNA Ligase– Enzyme that connects sections of DNA together Okazaki Fragments Lagging Strand Leading Strand 3’ 5’
2) Transcription • = production of RNA by DNA • DNA produces several kinds of RNA • messenger-RNA (m-RNA) carries the genetic code for a protein out from the chromosome to the ribosomes • transfer-RNA (t-RNA) carries individual amino acids to the messenger RNA which puts them in the proper sequence • ribosomal-RNA (r-RNA) links up the amino acids to form a protein
Translation • = protein synthesis, translating the genetic code into a specific protein chain of amino acids
Fig. 8.10 • Simultaneoustranscription andtranslation inbacteria
RNA Polymerase _________________________Connects RNA nucleotides together (like DNA polymerase) Becomes mRNA (messenger RNA) – this has the code for how to build a protein
tRNA – transfer RNA anticodon & amino acid Codon- A section of three nucleotides in a row that code for an amino acid
Mutations • Can be negative, neutral, or positive! • defined as a change in the base sequence of DNA • can involve one or more nucleotides • the source of new genes (such as virulence or drug resistance) • about one mutation per million replicated genes • causes: • errors in DNA replication • radiation • mutagenic chemicals
The electromagnetic spectrum: effective wave lengths: • a. ultraviolet radiation • damages DNA • optimum wave length: 260 nm • poor penetrating ability
Ames Test uses bacteria as carcinogenindicators (figure 8.22) • Many known mutagens have been found to be carcinogens
Genetic Recombination • The exchange of genes between 2 DNA molecules to form new combinations of genes on a chromosome. • Vertical gene transfer • Genes are passed from an organism to its offspring • Horizontal gene transfer • Between bacteria of the same generation! • Donor cell to recipient cell = recombinant
Bacterial gene transfers • Bacteria have a number of forms of recombination: • ___________ • ___________ • ___________ Conjugation Transformation Transduction
Bacterial conjugation(DNA transferred through a mating process) • 2 bacteria connected by a tube calledthe sex pilus • F = fertility factor(ability to mate) • F+ is equal to being male (one thatgrows the sex pilus) • F– is equal to being a female • DNA passes through the sex pilusfrom the F+ to the F– • usually just the F factor, but sometimesother genes are carried along • F– becomes F+
Transduction: • Transduction: host DNA carried from cell to cell by virus • Figure 8.28
Biotechnology • Restriction Enzymes – enzymes found in bacteria that cut DNA at specific sequences.