* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Lecture 8: Gene mapping in bacteria Escherichia coli
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Lecture 8: Gene mapping in bacteria Escherichia coli Theodor von Escherich, photo around 1900 1. Bacterial cultures 2. Bacterial conjugation 3. Mapping with Hfr strains 4. Recombination in bacterial crosses Bacterial cultures Bacteria can be grown in liquid media and on solid (agar) media Minimal media are those that contain the minimum nutrients possible for colony growth, generally without the presence of amino acids, and are often used to grow "wild type" microorganisms Minimal media contain carbon source (e.g. glucose), salts and water Wild type bacteria are usually prototrophic: they can synthesize all necessary compound “from scratch”. Prototrophs can grow on minimal media. Prototrophy can be lost by mutations leading to auxotrophy. Auxotrophy is the inability of an organism to synthesize a particular compound required for its growth. Auxotrophs cannot grow on minimal media. Both prototrophic and auxotrophic bacteria can grow on enriched media that contain the nutrients required to support the growth of a wide variety of organisms, including some of the more fastidious ones http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growth_medium bacterial cells do have phenotypes Joshua Lederberg Edward L. Tatum A general approach to detect recombination in bacteria The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1958 "for their discovery that genes act by regulating definite chemical events" George Wells Beadle 1/4 of the prize California Institute of Technology (Caltech) Edward Lawrie Tatum 1/4 of the prize Rockefeller Institutute for Medical Research, NY "for his discoveries concerning genetic recombination and the organization of the genetic material of bacteria" Joshua Lederberg 1/2 of the prize University of Wisconsin Madison, WI Lederberg and Tatum’s experiment (1946) The parental strains were auxotrophic: they could not grow on minimal medium Prototrophic recombinant progeny were formed with freq. 10-7 Bacterial conjugation Bacterial conjugation (“F-factor”) happens with frequency of 30% François Jacob and Elie Wollman (both at Inst. Pasteur, France) From left to right: François Jacob, Jacques Monod and André Lwoff, who were awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1965 (for regulation of lacoperon, which will be considered later in this course). Interrupted-conjugation experiment of Jacob and Wollman (1957) Hfr: strs azir tonr lac+ gal+ x F-: strr azis tons lac- galConjugation Interruption Plating exconjugants (all strr) azir tonr etc. Interrupted-conjugation experiment of Jacob and Wollman (1957) Hfr: strs azir tonr lac+ gal+ x F-: strr azis tons lac- gal- Formation of an Hfr cell: frequency 10-3 per each F+ cell Transfer of the chromosome by Hfr during conjugation freq. 10-4 per each Hfr cell gal+ lac+ tonr azir gal+ lac+ tonr azir gal+ lac+tonr azir Genetic map of the genes in bacteria 100 25 gal 20 15 lac 10 ton azi 5 0 / Origin Recombination during bacterial conjugation donor DNA meroploid cells (partial diploid) recipient’s chromosome Single crossover would make the chromosome linear and the cell would die Insertion of F factor into bacterial chromosome O – ‘origin’ of transfer The order of gene transfer is determined by polarity and site of integration of F-factor in the chromosome • in each Hfr cell line the polarity and the site are different • hence the exact gene transfer order are not the same • but the relative gene order is the same – as in the original chromosome Genetic (old) and sequencing-based (1997) maps of E. coli 100 min Conjugation summary 10-7 10-3 10-4 ~30% Conjugation summary 10-7 ~30% Important: 10-3 10-4 F+ cells DO NOT transfer their genes directly: F+ convert into Hfr (10-3) and those Hfr cells would then perform the transfer (10-4), thereby creating an APPEARANCE of F+ (10-4 X 10-3 =10-7) transfering genes at 10-7 Production of an F’ factor a gene (e.g. lac+) carried by F’ is transferred with 30% freq., but all others still at 10-7 F’ factor carrying lac gene