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ANSWER KEY Name_______________________________ Bacterial Genetics, BIO 4443/6443 Fall Semester 2003 Exam III StudentpID#__________________________ 1.) You have three compatible plasmids and you want to know if they are conjugative, mobilizable, or nonmobilizable. Plasmid A has an ampR gene (ampicillin resistance) Plasmid B has a kanR gene (kanamycin resistance) Plasmid C has a tetR gene (tetracycline resistance) You use a recipient E.coli that is resistant to rifampicin and perform the following experiments. No i.) A culture of cells that contains plasmid A is mixed with the recipient, Colonies allowed to incubate for several hours, and then the mixture is plated on a plate containing ampicillin and rifampicin. ii.) A culture of cells that contains plasmid B is mixed with the recipient, allowed to incubate for several hours, and then the mixture is plated on a plate containing kanamycin and rifampicin. No Colonies iii.) A culture of cells that contains plasmid C is mixed with the recipient, allowed to incubate for several hours, and then the mixture is plated on a plate containing tetracycline and rifampicin. iv.) A culture of cells that contains all three plasmids, A, B and C, is mixed with the recipient, incubated for several hours, and then the mixture is spread on each of the plates shown below. No Colonies ampicillin and rifampicin kanamycin and rifampicin tetracycline and rifampicin 1.) Is plasmid A self-transmissible, mobilizable, or nonmobilizable? Why (4pts) Mobilizable. It is able to transfer to another cell, but only in the presence of the selftransmissable plasmid. 2.) Is plasmid B self-transmissible, mobilizable, or nonmobilizable? Why (4pts) Nonmobilizable. It is unable to transfer to another cell. 3.) Is plasmid C self-transmissible, mobilizable, or nonmobilizable? Why (4pts) Self-transmissible. It is able to transfer to another cell . 4.) Which of the plasmids are likely to have the genes that encode for pilus formation? (4pts) Self-transmissible plasmids generally encode the genes for pilus formation, plasmid C. 5.) Which plasmids are likely to have the genes that encode for a relaxase or nickase? (4pts) Both self-transmissible and mobilizable plasmids would need a relaxase-like gene to initiate transfer, plasmid A and plasmid C. 6.) Which antibiotic(s) were used to counterselect against the donor cells? (4pts) rifampicin Name_____________________________ page 2 7.) Describe (or draw) the events involved in the conjugative transfer of a plasmid. Include the following terms if appropriate (not all the terms are appropriate). Donor, Recipient, Transconjugate, Transformant, oriV, oriT, RNAI, Leading strand replication, Lagging Strand Replication, pilus, Dnase, Relaxase, Primase, Transformasome, Tra pore complex. (10 pts) 1. The donor cell forms a pilus and draws the recipient into contact and other transfer (Tra) proteins form a pore complex so that transfer can occur. 2. A relaxase, or nicking enzyme, makes a nick at the origin of transfer, oriT, on the plasmid. 3. The 5’ end of the nicked template is held by the pore complex and the lagging strand template is transferred into the recipient cell. 4. As the lagging strand template is transferred, the leading strand template is re-replicated. 5. The lagging strand template is simultaneously replicated in the recipient cell. 6. Once the entire template has been transferred, replication completes and the ends of the molecule are joined, and the pore complex breaks down and both cells have the plasmid. 8.) Strain A is a his- trp+ Hfr strain of E. coli. Strain B is a his+ trp- recipient. You mix the two strains and grow them under conditions where conjugation normally occurs, before spreading the mixture on minimal plates that contain glucose plus the supplements indicated below. Following an overnight incubation, draw how each plate would be expected to appear. BELOW EACH PLATE, EXPLAIN WHAT GROWS AND WHY. (8 pts) Plate 1: Plate 2: Plate 3: Plate4: Histidine Tryptophan Histidine and No additions Tryptophan Rationale: Strain A grows. Strain B grows. Everything grows. Only transcojugates grow. No counterselection No selection No selection Without supplements, the against donor against recipient against either strain. his+ recipient requires the transfer of trp+. You repeat the experiment above, this time using a his- trp+ strain of E. coli that carries an F plasmid, Strain A, and the same his+ trp- recipient as a recipient, Strain B. After spreading and incubation, draw how each plate would be expected to appear. BELOW EACH PLATE, EXPLAIN WHAT GROWS AND WHY. (4 pts) Plate 1: Plate 2: Plate 3: Plate4: Histidine Tryptophan Histidine and No additions Tryptophan No growth Rationale: Strain A grows. Strain B grows. Everything grows. Only transcojugates grow. No counterselection No selection No selection The his+ recipient still against donor against recipient against either strain. requires trp+ to grow, but no transfer of chromosomal genes occurs using an F plasmid. Name_____________________________ page 3 You have isolated a new mutant that confers resistance to the antibiotic naladixic acid (nalR) in an Hfr strain and you would like to determine its position on the chromosome. You know that trpA is located at 27 minutes on the chromosome, hisG is located at 45 minutes on the chromosome, and argR is located at 74 minutes on the chromosome and your nalR strain is wild type for all of these markers. You mate the Hfr strain to an E. coli recipient that is rifR, trpA-, hisG-, argR- for 90 minutes and then spread the cells on a minimal plate that contains i) rifampicin, histidine, and arginine. 100 colonies grow up on these plates. When you replica plate these 100 colonies onto plates that contain ii.) rifampicin and arginine, 24 colonies grow. or iii.) rifampicin and histidine, 3 colonies grow. or iv.) rifampicin, arginine, histidine, and naladixic acid, 19 colonies grow. 9.) What gene(s) is selected for in plate (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv)? (5pts) i.) trpA (27 min, 100%) ii.) hisG (45 min, 24%) iii) argR (74, min, 3%) iv.) nalR (?, 19%) 10.) Based on your results above, fill in the graph below to determine where the nal gene maps on the E. coli chromsome AND indicate the minute position for nal next to the graph (9pts) % recombinants 100 trpA hisG nalR The nal gene is located at approximately 10 ___51___ minutes on the E. coli chromosome argR 1 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Minutes on the chromosome Name_____________________________ page 4 You’ve identified an operon that controls the expression of the genes that are required to synthesize the amino acid tryptophan. You mutagenize the bacteria and isolate 8 trp- mutants that map to this region. Hoping to understand more, you decide to determine how many different genes are represented in your 8 mutants using a complementation analysis. You isolate F’ factors that each carry one of the trp- mutations. One by one, you transfer each F’ into each mutant to see if the different trp- mutants can complement each other. The ability of each transconjugate to grow in the absence of tryptophan is shown below. Recipient mutant #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 which carries an F’ with mutant #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + - + + - - 11.) Which mutants have mutations that are in the same trp gene. How many different genes have you isolated mutations in? (10pts) Group A Group B Group C Group D mut #1, mut #2, mut #6 mut #3 mut #4 mut #5, mut #7, mut #8 The mutations fall into four different genes You’ve isolated an additional mutant #9 that appears different from the other mutants in your complementation tests. Its results are shown below. Recipient mutant #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9 #10 which carries an F’ with mutant #9 - - - - - - - - - 12.) Describe a type of mutation that could produce the above result for mutant #9 and identify where in the operon the mutation occurs? (5pts) It could be a large deletion that encompasses all four genes or, if all the genes are in the same operon, it could be a mutation in that inactivates the promoter region and prevents the transcription of this operon. Name_____________________________ page 5 The last mutant you isolate, mutant #10, maps to a different portion of the chromosome from all the other mutations and you suspect that it has landed in a regulatory protein for the operon. You isolate an F’ with mutation #10 on it and perform the complementation analysis as before. In addition, you also try complementing the mutant with the wild type strain and obtain the results shown below. Recipient mutant #1 #2 #3 #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9 #10 WT cell which carries an F’ with mutant #10 + 13.) Assuming that mutation #10 does occur in the regulatory gene for this operon, is the mutation dominant or recessive to the wild type gene? (2pts) Since the wild type pheontype is expressed when the two mutations are both present, the mutation is recessive to the wild type gene. 14.) Assuming that this mutation inactivates the regulatory gene, is it more likely that the trp operon is regulated by positively or negatively? Why? (3pts) It is more likely to be a positively regulated operon. Since inactivation of the regulatory gene renders the cell unable to express (or activate transcription) from the operon. If it were a negatively regulated operon, inactivation of the regulatory protein would be expected to result in constitutive expression of the genes since it would not be present to bind and repress the operon. 15.) You have obtained the following four mutant strains of the naturally competent bacteria B. subtilis. For each strain, describe what effect the mutation would most likely have on the competence of the bacteria and WHY. (8 pts) A strain deleted for comX: ComX is the pheromone precursor peptide that is processed and secreted by the cell. In the absence of the pheromone, the cell would not be able to sense and initiate the upregulation of the compence genes that are needed for DNA uptake. A strain with a point mutation in comA that renders the ComA protein constitutively active: ComA is the transcription factor that, when activated by phosphorylation, acts as a positive transcriptional regulator that turns on the genes necessary for DNA uptake and competence. If ComA is constitutively active, cells would probably be competent most of the time. A strain deleted for comP: ComP is the transmembrane receptor protein that binds to the competence pheromone to initiate the induction of the competence genes. If it is deleted, it would prevent the ability of the cell to sense and turn on the competence genes. Name_____________________________ page 6 You are trying to knockout the lacZ gene in the naturally competent bacterium Acinetobacter calcoaceticus. You have purified a plasmid that contains the lacZ gene with the gene for kanamycin resistance inserted into the middle of the gene to inactivate it. You mix naturally competent culture of bacteria with a solution of plasmid DNA that has been treated in the following way: i.) The plasmid was linearized and denatured into single stranded. ii.) You linearize the plasmid DNA with a restriction endonuclease before you mix it with the cells iii.) You leave the circular plasmid intact without doing anything 16.) Which procedure(s) will most likely yield transformants? Why or why not? (8pts) Only procedure ii would have a chance to yield transformants because naturally competent cells bind to double stranded DNA and take it up in linear form. 17.) Which of the above substrates would yield transformants if you were to induce competence by using electroporation to transform the DNA? (4pts) All of the procedures would allow the DNA to be taken up by the cell since the electroporation technique generally makes the cells porous to almost any small molecule. Obtaining a stable transformant would then depend on recombination occurring between the transformed DNA and the cellular copy.