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Chapter 18: Genetics of Bacteria and Viruses

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Title: Chapter 18: Genetics of Bacteria and Viruses


1
Chapter 18 Genetics of Bacteria and Viruses
  • AP Biology Ms. Rader

2
Viruses
  • Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites
  • They lack the necessary ribosomes or machinery to
    replicate themselves or have any metabolism
  • The host range is the species that a virus can
    infect. Very often a virus is limited to one or
    just a couple of species that have suitable cells
    for the virus to infect.
  • Viruses recognize host cells by binding to
    specific membrane receptors. These cells are
    usually tissue specific. For example, influenza
    virus infects the cells of the respiratory tract.

3
Influenza
4
Viral Structure
  • Viruses are pieces of nucleic acids (either
    dsDNA, ssDNA, dsRNA or ssRNA) and a protein coat
    called a capsid.
  • Some viruses have a membranous envelope, usually
    derived from the host cell membrane.

5
Bacteriophages
  • Viruses that attack bacteria are called
    bacteriophages or just phages.
  • The most studied phages are those that infect the
    E. coli bacterium. The seven phages are named T2,
    T4, etc. They all have very similar structures
    that has become the stereotypical virus structure
    taught in biology.

6
Viral Reproduction Lytic Cycle
  • The virus infects the cell by attaching to
    receptors on the cells surface using its tail
    fibers.
  • The tail sheath facilitates the injection of the
    virus DNA into the E. coli.

7
Viral Reproduction Lytic Cycle
  • The capsid remains on the outside of the
    bacterium and the DNA in the cell is hydrolyzed.
  • The phage DNA takes over the cells proteins and
    enzymes to start replicating, transcribing, and
    translating the viral DNA.
  • The phage parts start to assemble and then
    directs the production of lysozyme that ruptures
    the cell wall releasing the phages (100-200
    particles can be released from one bacterial cell)

8
Lytic Cycle
9
Viral Reproduction Lysogenic Cycle
  • Some viruses replicate their genome and do not
    destroy the host cell.
  • The l phage attaches to the host cell receptor
    and injects its DNA.
  • Instead of hydrolyzing the host cell DNA the
    viral DNA is incorporated into the host genome.
    This is called a prophage and it is replicated
    each time the host cell replicates its genome.
  • One of the prophage genes codes for a protein
    that inhibits the expression of the other viral
    genes. This gene is called the repressor protein.

10
Viral Reproduction Lysogenic Cycle
  • The virus remains quiet and its DNA is
    transferred to each subsequent daughter cell as
    the host cell replicates, more or less, normally.
  • At certain times the virus can be activated and
    enter the lytic cycle. This is usually at times
    of stress, concurrent illness, or some other
    external factor that triggers the virus to enter
    this cycle.
  • The viral genome leaves the bacterial chromosome
    and circularizes and starts to actively make
    viral components that assemble into virus
    particles. The virus then ruptures the cell and
    is released to infect other cells.

11
Lysogenic cycle
12
Viral Reproduction
  • Viral Envelopes Viruses with membranous
    envelopes use them to enter and exit the cell.
  • The membrane is typically a lipid bilayer with
    glycoprotein spikes protruding from the surface
  • The glycoprotein spikes bind to receptors on the
    host cell membrane and then the viral membrane
    fuses with the host membrane, releasing the viral
    capsid into the host cell
  • Enzymes in the host cells cytosol break the
    capsid apart, releasing the viral genome (DNA or
    RNA) into the cytosol.

13
Viral Envelopes
  • The viral genome is copied, transcribed, and
    translated. The viral genome codes for the
    glycoprotein spikes which are produced in the
    lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum.
  • The glycoprotein spikes are transported to the
    host cells membrane and become a part of the
    exterior of the cell. This becomes the exit point
    for the new viral particles
  • As the viral particles emerge from the host cell
    they become wrapped in the host cells membrane
    and covered in the glycoprotein spikes.

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15
RNA virus Reproduction
  • There are three types of single stranded RNA
    viruses.
  • Some of these viruses use their RNA directly as
    mRNA. This viral genome can be directly
    transcribed into proteins.
  • Others use their RNA as a template to make mRNA.
    These viruses use their own enzymes to synthesize
    RNA from RNA.
  • The third type of ssRNA viruses are called
    retroviruses. The most infamous of the
    retroviruses is HIV (Human Immunodeficiency
    Virus) the causative agent of AIDS (Acquired
    Immunodeficiency Syndrome)

16
Retrovirus Reproduction
  • Retroviruses use their own enzyme called a
    reverse transcriptase to transcribe RNA into DNA.
    This DNA integrates into the host cell DNA.
  • This incorporated DNA is called a provirus.
    Unlike the prophage we discussed earlier the
    provirus does not leave the host DNA.
  • The host cells RNA polymerase transcribes the
    viral DNA into mRNA for protein synthesis and RNA
    for the genome of the new viral particles.

17
Retrovirus Reproduction
18
Recombination Genetics of Bacteria
  • Bacterial genome is concentrated in one area of
    the bacteria in a region referred to as the
    nucleoid.
  • Bacteria reproduce by binary fission and most
    offspring of a single bacterium are identical to
    the parent cell.
  • Individual mutations occur rarely, but in a
    rapidly reproducing organism mutations can
    provide significant diversity in a population

19
Transformation
  • Transformation is the alteration of bacterial DNA
    by incorporation of a naked piece of foreign DNA
    from outside of the cell.
  • Many species of bacteria have special proteins on
    the outside of their cell surface that facilitate
    the uptake of foreign DNA from the surrounding
    solution.
  • Even bacteria that do not possess these proteins
    are able to take in foreign DNA. E. coli can be
    stimulated to take in the DNA by placing the
    bacterium in a culture containing a high
    concentration of Ca2 ions. This process is used
    to get the E. coli to take in genes for proteins.
    We use this technique to get the bacteria to make
    proteins and hormones in large quantities.
    Examples are insulin and growth hormone.

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21
Transduction
  • In transduction, viruses carry bacterial genes
    from one host cell to another and insert those
    pieces of DNA into new host cells.
  • There are two ways this can occur
  • Generalized Transduction Where pieces of the
    lysed host cells DNA are packaged into the
    capsid of the viral particle instead of the viral
    genome. The virus is defective but it can still
    attach to a bacterial cell and inject this DNA.
  • Specialized Transduction Where a host bacterial
    cell is infected by a temperate phage (one that
    enters the lysogenic cycle.) When the viral DNA
    comes out of the bacterial chromosome sometimes
    it takes some of the bacterial DNA with it. When
    the phage exits the cell it takes this new DNA
    with it and then infects the next host cell with
    the new bacterial DNA and its viral DNA.

22
Conjugation in Bacteria
  • Another way that bacterial cells can get
    recombinant DNA is through conjugation with
    another bacterial cell.
  • Conjugation is direct transfer of genetic
    material from one bacteria to another while they
    are temporarily joined.
  • This is a form of primitive sexual reproduction
    for bacteria. It allows for greater genetic
    diversity without relying the random occurrence
    of mutations.

23
Conjugation
  • The transfer occurs when the donor bacteria uses
    the male appendage, called sex pili, to attach
    to the recipient or female bacteria.
  • The pili then pulls the recipient cell toward the
    donor cell and a temporary cytoplasmic bridge is
    formed between the two cells.
  • The DNA transfer happens along this bridge.

24
Plasmids
  • The ability to form the sex pili in bacteria is
    determined by the presence of a set of genes on a
    piece of DNA called the F factor.
  • The F factor can be either a part of the
    bacterial chromosome or on a separate piece of
    DNA called a plasmid.
  • Plasmids are small, circular pieces of DNA that
    can replicate themselves. These pieces of DNA are
    separate from the bacterial chromosome. Plasmids
    are similar to temperate phages in that they can
    sometimes reversibly incorporate into the
    bacterial genome.
  • The key differences between plasmids and
    temperate or lysogenic phages is that plasmids do
    not posses a protein coat and can not exist
    outside of the bacterial cell. Also, plasmids are
    generally beneficial to the cell, whereas phages
    are detrimental to the host cell.

25
F Plasmid
  • In bacterial conjugation the sex genes the F
    factor can be conveyed to the bacteria in a
    plasmid.
  • The F plasmid has about 25 genes
  • A cell that has the F plasmid is referred to as
    F (positive for the F factor or male
    bacteria.) F- cells do not possess the F factor
    in either form and are considered female cells
    and are DNA recipients in conjugation.
  • The F factor plasmid is heritable and F cells
    give rise to other F cells
  • During conjugation a F cell mates with a F- cell
    only the F factor plasmid is transferred through
    the conjugation tube

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27
Integrated F factor genes
  • Cells with the F factor integrated into the
    bacterial chromosome is called a Hfr cell because
    it has a high frequency of recombination.
  • When these cells go through conjugation they act
    as the male cell, but they are able to transfer
    bacterial DNA from the Hfr cell to the recipient
    cell.
  • The Hfr cell initiates conjugation and DNA
    replication starts at the point of the F factor
    genes.
  • The leading end of the F factor genes are now
    dragging copied bacterial DNA behind it.
    Conjugation is almost always interrupted before
    the entire Hfr chromosome is replicated and the
    DNA fragment is left in the recipient cell.

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29
R plasmids
  • The genes that carry resistance to antibiotics
    are carried on plasmids called R plasmids.
  • The indiscriminate use of antibiotics can lead to
    resistance and the propagation of bacteria that
    carry R plasmids to particular antibiotics.
  • Some R plasmids carry resistance to up to ten
    different antibiotics.

30
Transposon
  • Transposable genetic element
  • Transposons are genes that can move from one
    position to another on the bacterial chromosome,
    from plasmid to bacterial chromosome, or from
    plasmid to plasmid.
  • Transposons can be moved by cut and paste,
    where the set of genes are cut from one place and
    then sliced into another location.
  • They can also be moved by replicative
    transposition. This is where the transposon
    replicates at its original site and the copy is
    transposed into the new site.

31
Insertion Sequences
  • Simplest form of a transposon is an insertion
    sequence. Contains only the genes for the
    transposase and inverted repeats on either side
    of the genes for the transposase enzyme. The
    enzyme cuts the DNA and facilitates the moving of
    the transposon.
  • These transposons do not cause much change in
    the genome unless they land in the coding region
    of another gene.

32
Composite Transposons
  • Composite transposons are longer and more
    complicated transposons. They carry the
    transposase genes and some extra genes.
  • Composite transposons are typically beneficial to
    the bacterium. Antibiotic resistance to multiple
    types of antibiotics is achieved by composite
    transposons.

33
Operons
  • Some genes are linked by their promoter region.
    This means that one promoter signals the
    transcription of more that more gene.
  • The benefit of such a system is twofold first
    the genes and subsequent proteins can be made as
    a group when needed, second a on and off switch
    can be used to regulate the transcription of a
    group of related genes.
  • The on and off switch is called an operon.
  • The operon is located in the promoter region of
    the related genes or between the promoter and the
    coding region of the DNA.
  • The operon controls access of the DNA to the RNA
    polymerase.

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Operons and Repressors
  • By itself, the operon switch is in the on
    position, and transcription will take place.
  • The off position of the operon is controlled by
    the presence or absence of repressors.
  • Repressors are proteins that bind to the operon
    and inhibit transcription.

36
Repressors
  • Repressors are proteins that are product of
    regulatory genes. The genes code for the
    production of the repressor protein.
  • For example, in the gene that codes for the
    enzymes responsible for the production of
    tryptophan, trp genes has the regulatory gene
    trpR.
  • Feedback inhibition is the mechanism that
    controls whether the repressor actively represses
    the expression of the trp genes.
  • Tryptophan is then a corepressor in this pathway
    as it activates the repressor protein.

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