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Fimbriae Nucleoid Ribosomes Plasma membrane Bacterial chromosome Cell wall Capsule 0.5 µm (a) A typical rod-shaped bacterium Flagella (b) A thin section through the bacterium Bacillus coagulans (TEM) Most bacteria isolated from the wild have one or more plasmids. Most are cryptic (unknown function). The Process of Bacterial Conjugation: There are many examples of plasmids encoding determinants of pathogenesis: Examples: Antibiotic resistance: Resistance Factors (R-factors) provide the molecular explanation for clinically relevant antibiotic resistance. Multiple drug resistance can be carried on the same plasmid (such as pBR322 which carries resistance to both ampicillin and tetracycline) Virulence genes: a) Adherence factors b) Lysis factors (ColE1) c) Iron acquisition factors Possesses adherence pili Lacks adherence pili http://www.palaeos.com/Kingdoms/Prokaryotes/Eubacteria.htm Pathogenic Schemes of Diarrheagenic E. coli: Bundle Forming Pilus E. Coli adhering to intestinal cells http://cmr.asm.org/cgi/content/full/11/1/142 Vibrio parahaemolyticus http://www.mednet.cl/link.cgi/Medwave/Reuniones/ medicina/2006y2007/8/2544 http://www.bccdc.ca/dis-cond/a-z/_v/Vibrio/default.htm Gram negative bacterium Common cause of gastrointestinal illness from eating raw or undercooked shellfish Precise means of virulence still unknown Pseudomonas marginalis: Gram – bacteria that causes soft rot of plant tissues Present in soil and water of Delmarva watershed Able to degrade phytate (a form of phosphorous in chicken manure) to a bioavailable form of phosphorous, contributing to algal blooms) Cyanobacteria The photosynthetic systems of cyanobacteria generate ATP, NADPH, and O2 The ability to use water as an electron source is believed to have generated the oxygen in the earth’s atmosphere http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/bacteria/cyanointro.html http://sun.menloschool.org/~nfortman/8th/webpages2001sp/blakes.precambrianEra/cells.html 14_44_Life_evolved.jpg http://www.botany.hawaii.edu/faculty/webb/BOT311/Cyanobacteria/Cyanobacteria.htm In cyanobacteria, thylakoids are invaginations of the plasma membrane : Number - Responds to Light Intensity Low light -> Many (to catch more light) High Light -> Few (not as many needed) Photosynthetic Electron Transport During light excitation, electrons are moved to an “excited state” The free energy as the electrons “fall” from their excited states is used to make ATP and NADPH http://www.jensenlab.caltech.edu/Projects/carboxyso mes.gif Carboxysomes: Special complexes that contain the enzyme RuBisCO Carbon Fixation The reaction below is catalyzed by the most abundant enzyme on earth: ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase (Rubisco): This reaction requires NADPH and ATP hydrolysis The 1,3 diphosphoglycerate that is formed serves as the substrate for the eventual synthesis of glucose in the cytosol Photosynthesis Overview The overall reaction for photosynthesis can be written as: 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy → C6H12O6 + 6O2 During photosynthesis, electrons are transferred from water to carbon dioxide, and glucose is formed. Water has been oxidized; carbon dioxide has been reduced. Aerobic Respiration in Bacteria Oxygen (O2) necessary here http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucbplrd/ETchain.png Why do you think that photosynthesis must have evolved first? The Current Theory of the Evolution of the Eukaryotic Cell • According to the endosymbiotic hypothesis, (advanced by Lynn Margulis and also Sarah Gibbs), eukaryotes arose from a symbiotic relationship between various prokaryotes. - Heterotrophic bacteria became mitochondria. (Heterotrophs are organisms that feed off of other organisms) - Cyanobacteria (phototrophic organisms- derive their energy from sunlight) became chloroplasts. - The original host cell is believed to have been a large eukaryotic cell. Internal membrane systems are the hallmark of eukaryotic cells Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. ArchaeBacteria bacteria BACTERIA ARCHAEA Protista Plantae Fungi Animalia EUKARYA Protista: single celled eukaryotic organisms. Protozoa is often a synonymous term, although this term usually does not include the photosynthetic protists (such as dinoflagellates and algae) FOSSIL HISTORY OF ALGAE Fossil Cyanobacterium • Dates back to 3.5 billion years before present. • First algae—Cyanobacteria—photosynthetic, without any complex organization. • Cells with complex organization evolved with nucleus and other cellular organelles. With the exception of the cyanobacteria, algae are eukaryotes—that is, the insides of their cells are organized into separate membrane-wrapped organelles, including a nucleus and mitochondria. Green Algae The single-celled algae Chlamydomonas Volvox Contain same chlorophyll a and b as in cyanobacteria Reserve food in the form of starch Cell wall made of cellulose Gave rise to land plants http://faculty.abe.ufl.edu/~chyn/age2062/lect/lect_15/22_15.GIF Ulva lactuta: Sea Lettuce http://www.chesapeakebay.net/fieldguide/critter/sea_lettuce Very common in nutrient rich areas Will often block light to sea grass beds Red Algae: Gracilaria vermiculophylla http://www.marinespecies.org/photogallery.php?album=766&pic=3539 U. lactuca and G. vermiculophylla together form 80% of the macroalgal biomass in the Chesapeake Bay region (Thomsen 1998; Tyler et al. 2005). Rhodophyta No flagella Food reserves of floridian starch (a type of pectin) Chloroplasts only contain chlorophyll a, and also contains both α and β Carotene. Cell wall associated with sulfated galactan polymers that are economically important (ex: agar and carrageenan) Micro Algae http://www.scctv.net/biomedia/pdf/BOmicrolife/Protists.pdf Algae are very diverse, but generally we can describe them as a) Single celled protists that live in water environments b) Usually carry out photosynthesis c) Usually have a flagella and a cell wall made of cellulose (most) and/or silica (dinoflagellates and diatoms ) The most important photosynthesizing organisms on earth. They capture more of the sun's energy and produce more oxygen than all plants combined Algae are extremely important in aquatic food chains ( a major component of plankton). In the euglena shown above, the red eye spot serves as a guidance system that allows cell to seek out maximal light conditions for photosynthesis Chromista: Diatoms http://botit.botany.wisc.edu/images/130/Protista_I/Diatom_Images /Grouped_diatoms_MC_.html http://www.bethel.edu/~kisrob/bio321/lab/BIO321AquaticAlgae/i mages/Diatoms%2C-mixed.jpg Interesting features of diatoms: a) The photosynthetic pigment is yellow, not green (mix of chlorophyll c and carotenoids) b) Energy storage from photosynthesis in form of oil droplets c) Cell walls consist of silica (basis of diatomaceous earth) d) Comprise 20-25% of the world’s primary biological production Alveolates: Dinoflagellates “Ancient” eukaryotic features: Low level of histone proteins; a major component of the DNA attached to membranes (as in bacteria) “Mixotrophic”: some species are mainly photosynthesizers, (autotrophs) while others can phagocytose microscopic organisms (heterotrophs) Two dividing dinoflagellates http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/indexmag.html?http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artsep01/dinof.html Pyrrhophyta: Dinoflagellates Two flagella inserted into their cell wall. One wraps around the cell (transverse flagellum), while the other, longitudinal flagellum, extends perpendicular to it. The beating of the longitudinal flagellum and the transverse flagellum imparts a forward and spiralling swimming motion. Both heterotrophic (eat other organisms), autotrophic (photosynthetic) and mixotrophic dinoflagellates are known. http://www.geo.ucalgary.ca/~macrae/palynology/dinoflagellates/theca.gif In some countries, in summer or autumn months, massive dinoflagellate blooms tint large areas of the sea surface a red or yellow color. This phenomenon called 'red tides', is often caused by changes in water temperature or light and associated with an abundance of nutrients like nitrates and phosphates (eutrophication) carried into the sea by coastal rivers. Many kinds of marine life suffer, for the dinoflagellates produce a neurotoxin which affects muscle function in susceptible organisms. Humans may also be affected by eating fish or shellfish containing the toxins. A "red tide" off the coast of La Jolla, California http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_tide Karlodinium Feeding on Rhodomonas Karlodinium associated with fish kills in the Chesapeake Bay region Secrete a toxin which paralyzes prey. When blooms occur, the toxin densities are high enough to kill the fish http://www.mdsg.umd.edu/CQ/v06n1/side3/index.php Was There Another Fish Killer? The Case for a Toxic Culprit Tracking sample after sample, Allen Place turned up a toxic dinoflagellate in his laboratory that now shows up at fish kills all along the Mid-Atlantic and beyond. Photograph by Michael W. Fincham. In August 1997 an algal bloom formed at the mouth of the Pocomoke River, common in the nutrient-rich waters of the Chesapeake Bay. Most likely this crowd of algae contained what scientists call cryptophytes, a major food source for algae eaters, like menhaden. When menhaden gathered to feed on the bloom, Karlodinium veneficum also showed up. Not unusual. For many feeding dinoflagellates, cryptophytes are a favorite prey. As the menhaden fed on algae, these dinoflagellates passed through their gills. The Karlo-toxin toxin began to attack the gill tissue of the fish. Dead and dying fish drew dormant Pfiesteria out of their cysts in the sediment and they began to feed on this banquet of fish tissue. Some are even parasites of marine species, such as crabs and lobsters: Hematodinium perezi in the lymph of the blue crab http://www.vims.edu/~jeff/dinos.htm http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/protista/dinoflagellata.html Hematodinium sp. Infects numerous crustaceans in worldwide distribution Invades hemolymph of host; consumes hemocyanin and mobilized host metabolites; combined lack of oxygen, nutrition, and concurrent tissue damage; crustaceans become sluggish and with heavy infections will die Hematodinium sp. trophont form in blue crab hemolymph Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. ArchaeBacteria bacteria BACTERIA ARCHAEA Protista Plantae Fungi Animalia EUKARYA Protista: single celled eukaryotic organisms. Protozoa is often a synonymous term, although this term usually does not include the photosynthetic protists (such as dinoflagellates and algae) http://www.arthursclipart.or g/biologya/biology/classifica tion%20animals.gif A Generalized Mollusc Whelk shells Northern Quahog http://www.cabrillo.edu/~jcarothers/lab/notes/molluscs/FRAMES/MainFrame.html The Arthropods http://static.howstuffworks.com/gi f/adam/images/en/arthropodsbasic-features-picture.jpg http://www.britannica.hk/zoology /arthropod-355876.html http://web.vims.edu/adv/ed/crab/guts20b.jpg Eyestalk: hormone regulation Rough map of the distribution of Carcinus maenas, blue areas are the native range, red areas are the introduced or invasive range, black dots represent single sightings that did not lead to invasion, and green areas are the potential range of the species http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carcinus_maenas Feeds on bivalve molluscs (oysters, clams, mussels) and small crustaceans Range is limited by the blue crab, which feeds on it The green crab has been hypothesized to have brought Hematodinium disease to the eastern coastal US Range of Callinectes sapidus Cannibalized blue crabs make up as much as 13% of a crab's diet! Adult blue crabs prefer mollusks such as oysters and hard clams as their primary food sources. Blue crabs are also scavengers of dead fish, shrimp, molluscs, etc; After mating, females migrate to high-salinity waters in lower estuaries and near-shore spawning areas. They over-winter before spawning by burrowing in the mud. Most females spawn for the first time two to nine months after mating, usually from May through August the following season. The female extrudes fertilized eggs into a cohesive mass, or "sponge," that remains attached to her abdomen until the larvae emerge. http://www.bluecrab.info/spawning.html When ready to molt, the crab "cracks" its shell open from the back and then backs out After shedding its old shell, the crab first expands its new shell by pumping water into its body. After that, it takes about 72 hours (three days) for the soft shell to harden. The exoskeleton is made of a material known as chitin, which is a glucose polymer with similarity to cellulose http://www.serc.si.edu/ed ucation/resources/bluecra b/molting.aspx Proposed Life Cycle in the Blue Crab http://www.americanscientist.org/templat e/AssetDetail/assetid/37182/ page/2;jsessionid=aaa5LVF0#37425 How do blue crabs become infected? a) Physical- Blue crab eats infected crabs or intermediate host b) Dinospore- stage in water possibly encapsulated in a sporocyst. Acquired through gills? Dinospores Are Emitted from Diseased Crustaceans Cancer pagurus Motile cells observed following death of a crab with Hematodinium. Dr. Sue Marrs in Stentiford and Shields DAO, 2005, 66: 47-70 http://www.vims.edu/~jeff/biology/stentiford%20and%20shields%202005.pdf Kim Jennings at IMET (Schott and Jagus lab) 2006 LMRCSC Internship Hematodinium sp. Infection in Blue Crabs Has Seasonal Cycles Messick and Shields 2000, Diseases of Aquatic Organisms Goals of Our Lab Very little is known about Hematodinium disease transmission in nature Find potential hotspots of Hematodinium in the Maryland Coastal Bays (MCB) a) Analyze its presence according to seasonal cycles b) Uncover ecological variables that are associated with free-living Hematodinium, and also discover potential alternate hosts Procedures Ponar Grab YSI 20 micron plankton trawl DNA Isolation kits traditional PCR QPCR If I were to ask you the question: “what do all living things share in common,” what would you say? The Nucleolus is the Site of rRNA Biogenesis http://www.cytochemistry.net/cellbiology/nucleus3.htm Alberts et al, Molecular Biology of the Cell rDNA is repetitive: multi-copy genes for ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is present on 5 chromosome pairs Great need in the cell for high levels of ribosomal synthesis The nucleolus organizes around the rRNA genes Depiction of The Ribosome as Seen by X-Ray Crystallography NTS SSU ITS1 LSU 5.8S NTS ITS2 ITS1 TCGCACGAAGAAAATAATAATATATTTTATTATTTTCGCACACAAACATTCACCGTGAACCTTAGCCATTAGCTAC GACGACTACTAGCTAGCTACTGAGTGGGGCGGTGGTGTGTTGGTTACTACTGCTACTTCTTACTCGTAGCTGA ACTGCACACACACTAGTACCCCTCTCTTGCTGGTAGGAGAAGTAGCTTCTACGGGGTGTGAGGGTACGGTGG TAGTACACGCCTACCACTGAACTCCTCCATCCCACGTTTGCTTTCCATAAACACAACATCTCTAATTTCAGCTAT TCATCTTGCTCTGCTCCCTTTCGCGGGGATAGGGCTTTCTTCAAACGTATGAC 5.8S TAGAAAATTTTAGCGATGAATGCCTCGGCTCGGGTTACGATGAAGGACGCAGCGAATTGCGATAAGCAATGCG AATTGCAGAATTCCGTGAATCATCAGATTTTTGAACGTACTCTACGCTCTCGGGTATCCCTGGGAGCATGTCTG GTCTCAGC ITS2 GTCTGTTCAACCTTTTGTGCCTCCTGGAGTTGTGAACATTCTCCTTCTTGGAAGCGATTTTGTGCACCAGTGA GCCTCTTTCCACACACATGCTCTACGACGCCTTGTTGTTGTAGACAGCGGAAGATGGCCATTGACGCATTAAA TATTAAGGGATTTGTAGAATGTTGTAGAGAGGGTTGGTTGCGTACGTCTCACCGTACGCACCAAAAGCTCTGC ATGTTCCCCAACAACACTTATGACCCACTTTAGGTCTAATGCTTGTTGGCCGAAGGGTTACACTGCATGGTTAT ACCGCTACTCTTCTTCCGCCCTTTACCGTGATAGTACACAGGTTTTCGGACTAGTGGCGCTATTGCAGCAGAA ATATTTATATCTCTGTATATATTTACACATG NTS SSU ITS1 LSU 5.8S ITS2 NTS Peptide bond formation is catalyzed by an enzymatic activity present in the large subunit The ribosome translocates, making available a new A site Elongating protein (Most human proteins are in the range of 100-2,000 amino acids) Comparison of two 18S Ribosomal RNA Sequences from Hematodinium sp. and Humans Endpoint PCR Analysis for Environmental Detection Site 1 Site 2 Site 3 Site 4 Site 5 Site 6 Site 7 Site 8 Site 9 Commercial Harbor Verrazano Bridge Newport Bay Trappe Creek Public Landing Whittington Point Taylor's Landing Wildcat Point Greenbackville Site 10 Site 11 Site 13 Site 14 Site 15 Site 18 Sinnickson Chincoteague Channel Tom's Cove Johnson's Bay Cedar Island Snug Harbor * Water Collection Dates 7_10 9_10 6_10; 9_10 4/10; 7/10 6_10; 9_10 *4/10; 6/10; 7/10 * * 6_10 4_10; 6_10; 7_10; 8_10; 10_10 7_10 6_11 4_10; 6_10 7_10 10_10 Sediment Collection Dates 8_11 4_10; 5_10; 7_10; 8_11 6_10; 8_11 8_11 5_10; 8_11 8_10; 8_11 8_10; 8_11 8_11 5_10; 7_10; 8_10; 10_10; 11_10 8_10; 10_10; 8_11 4_10; 6_10 48 of 546 (8.8%) of environmental samples from the Maryland and Virginia coastal bays were positive for Hematodinium sp. Four sites had detectable signal in water in April: earliest detection date we are aware of. Analysis of Hematodinium sp. at Sinnickson, Through Clone Libraries Analysis of Dinoflagellate 18 S rRNA Hematodinium Other species April 15/16 1 unidentified nanoflagellate June 2/13 July/August 13/25 10 Heterocapsa rotundata, 1 Peridinium sp. 3 Gymnodinium sanguineum, 1 Gymnodinium sp., 3 H. rotundata October 1 10/16 and 5 unidentified dinoflagellates 2 Pentapharsodinium tyrrhenicum, 1 G. simplex, 1 Gymnodinium sp., 1 H. rotundata and 1 Dinophyceae sp. Hematodinium Other species April 15/16 1 unidentified nanoflagellate June 2/13 July/August 13/25 10 Heterocapsa rotundata, 1 Peridinium sp. 3 Gymnodinium sanguineum, 1 Gymnodinium sp., 3 H. rotundata October 10/16 and 5 unidentified dinoflagellates 2 Pentapharsodinium tyrrhenicum, 1 G. simplex, 1 Gymnodinium sp., 1 H. rotundata and 1 Dinophyceae sp. Hematodinium sp. “Hotpsots” 2010 April 2011 Water Sediment Trappe Creek Taylors Landing Sinnickson Johnson’s Bay Verrazano Bridge Snug Harbor May Sediment Verrazano Bridge Public Landing Sinnickson June Newport Bay Public Landing Taylors Landing Greenbackville Johnson’s Bay July Commercial Harbor Verrazano Bridge Trappe Creek Sinnickson Taylor’s Landing Chincoteague Channel Cedar Island August Newport Bay Snug Harbor Whittington Point Wildcat Point Sinnickson Tom’s Cove Sept. Verrazano Bridge Newport Bay Public Landing Oct. Sinnickson Snug Harbor Nov. Water Sinnickson Tom’s Cove Tom’s Cove Commercial Harbor Verrazano Bridge Newport Bay Trappe Creek Public Landing Tom’s Cove Whittington Point Wildcat Point Greenbackville The MCB is a marine system some input from local rivers, but not enough fresh water to alter its high salinity http://www.epa.gov/owow_keep/estuaries/ pivot/images/maps_no_points/2008mcbays _no_points.jpg http://www.mdcoastalbays.org/files/pdfs_pdf/Report_Card.pdf “hotspots” all correlate with higher clay % soils Figure Courtesy Darlene Wells (MD-DNR) and Roman Jessien (MCBP) Averages for 2010 and 2011 in the MCBs Chl * * * Newport Bay-3 Chl (ug/L) 8.2 8.8 20.02 22.7 25.9 (ug/L) 3.9 17.1 9.4 15.3 16.8 9.4 14.7 8.7 8.3 April May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. 9.5 13 18.7 39.6 28 4.2 18 23.8 27.3 27.1 8.1 9.5 8.7 April May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. 7.2 19.4 23.1 24.4 15.4 2.2 9.2 9.7 4.5 9.3 6 19.2 4 3.6 April May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. 5.4 9.8 23.4 21.7 28.3 4.9 8.9 8.1 11.5 14.6 6.2 12.8 3.3 4.5 April May June July Aug. Sept. Oct. Nov. 6.8 Trappe Creek-4 * NA 12.3 10.5 Public Landing-5 5.8 Taylor's Landing-7 2.7 The Normal Nitrogen Cycle in Water (A) In marine communities the main fixers of N2 are cyanobacteria http://wordsinmocean.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/n-cycle.png The Normal Nitrogen Cycle in Water (B) Nitrobacter also can “fix” carbon, but they do it by chemosynthesis using the energy from the oxidized nitrite. http://acvaristica.files.wordpress.com/2008/07/nitrogen-cycle1.jpg Nitrate Assimilation by Algae http://www.jochemnet.de/fiu/bot4404/Nr_biochem_kl.jpg In marine environments, nitrogen is usually the limiting nutrient. Thus, any additional input will result in a strong enhancement of growth of the organisms that are there. The Chesapeake Bay Watershed The Chesapeake Bay is an estuary system with higher salinities closer to the mouth of the bay. http://alldownstream.wordpress.com /category/agriculture/ http://www.emporia.edu/earthsci/student/moran6/report1.htm Septic systems in growing communities are a greater threat to the health of the MCB because sewage treatment plants remove nitrogen more efficiently http://extension.umd.edu/environment/water/files/septic.html Rainfall runoff from impervious surfaces presents another problem, as these surfaces are not as good at filtering nutrients and preventing excess nutrient flow into local rivers http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=AGRICULTURAL+RUNOFF+DELMARVA&view=det ail&id=E880D7EC7FA60F205E88F31CD17F833188023BD4&first=0&FORM=IDFRIR http://faculty.salisbury.edu/~mllewis/agriculture/conclusion.htm DNA ATP Amino Acids http://www.star.nesdis.noaa.gov/star/images/bestof2005/fig1.jpg An algae bloom called a mahogany tide in Spa Creek, a tributary of the Chesapeake Bay. (Photo by Chesapeake Bay Program). http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/sep2010/2010-09-27092.html The algae bloom in the Chesapeake Bay by the start of the Hampton Roads Bridge Tunnel in Norfolk was taken on Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2009. (Ryan C. Henriksen | The Virginian-Pilot) http://hamptonroads.com/node/520146 Algal blooms can block light Seagrass beds will thus be negatively impacted, because they need to photosynthesize. Seagrass beds are primary nurseries for immature blue crabs http://ens-newswire.com/ens/jul2004/2004-07-30-10.asp Animal Manure Fouling Chesapeake Bay By J.R. Pegg WASHINGTON, DC, July 30, 2004 (ENS) - Cattle, pigs and chickens within the Chesapeake Bay watershed produce some 44 million tons of manure each year and far too much of it is seeping into the Bay, according to a new report by the Chesapeake Bay Foundation. The report says this pollution must be reined in if efforts to restore the health of the Bay are to succeed. "The Chesapeake Bay is being choked by excess manure, and despite years of effort the Bay's water quality is not improving," said CBF President William Baker. "Action to stop the pollution must begin now, not next year or several years from now." There is broad agreement that the Chesapeake Bay is an ecosystem in serious peril, and despite a slew of agreements and goals to protect and restore the Bay, little has changed in past decade. The nation's largest estuary continues to suffer from an unnatural influx of nitrogen and phosphorous, which come from sewage wastewater, agricultural runoff, urban runoff and air pollution. These pollutants feed massive algae blooms that kill fish and Bay grasses, which provide vital habitat for the Bay's famous blue crabs. Robbing the water of oxygen, these algae blooms can form massive dead zones - last year a dead zone covered 40 percent of the Chesapeake's main stem and stretched 150 miles. Oxygen (O2) necessary here http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucbplrd/ETchain.png Aerobic Respiration in Bacteria In response to episodic hypoxia blue crabs will: a) Try to swim away to areas of higher concentration b) Reduce metabolic activities In response to chronic hypoxia, not much is precisely known a) They increase the concentration of hemocyanin, which is an Oxygen carrying molecule in their hemolymph b) They seem to be more susceptible to disease Blue crabs undergoing hypoxic stress are less capable of clearing Vibrio infections than those under normoxic conditions It is likely that impaired hemocyte activity is the cause for this reduced immune response (hemocytes are the equivalent of white blood cells in crab hemolymph) Recombinant DNA Technology: The Cloning of Genes The process of cloning involves several steps: a) First, you have to identify what it is you want to clone; For simplicity, we will start with a gene. b) We then will use restriction enzymes to specifically digest DNA that surrounds our gene of interest c) Link these DNA fragments to a vector (usually a laboratory plasmid that will enable us to propagate our clone d) Next we transform the vector containing our cloned gene into a host organism (usually E. coli). This enables us to make multiple copies of the cloned gene. A) Gene of interest B) Digest vector and target DNA with same enzyme C) DNA ligase joins DNA D) Transform plasmid into E. coli E) Cloned gene