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Microbiology & DNA Technology Mrs. Daniels Advanced Biology - Ch. 23 & 14 Modified April 2008 Microbiology • Typically, microbiology encompasses all life-like and living organisms that do not fit into the categories of the macroscopic “large-scale” world • Includes prokaryotes (eubacteria and archaebacteria), viruses, prions, and protists • Also some unicellular fungi (yeast), plants (algae), and animals (daphnia) VIRUSES • • • • . What is a virus? Is it alive? Parts: Capsid - protein coat – Helical or a polyhedron (or a combination) • Outer membranous envelope (on some) • Nucleic acid - either DNA or RNA – May be ss or ds VIRUSES • Requires a host to reproduce • Where did they come from? • Some scientists believe that viruses originated as “part” of certain cells and that they must have “escaped” from those cells • This explains the specificity that a virus has to its host VIRUSES • NOTE the list of animal infecting types of viruses in your book. • • • • • Bacteriophages: Viruses that attack bacteria Important in genetic research Can be used clinically to kill pathogenic bacteria Reminder: Pathogens are any agents that cause disease BACTERIOPHAGES . • • • • • Sometimes just called phages Capsid Tail Tail fibers Mode of infection: insert their nucleic acid (typically ds DNA) In the time it takes to eat lunch… The LYTIC cycle • 1. Attachment - phage attaches to bacterial cell wall • 2. Penetration or Entry - the DNA is inserted into the bacterium • 3. Replication - the virus parts are copied • 4. Assembly - the virus parts are put together to make new bacteriophages • 5. Release - release of the new phages The Lysogenic Cycle Lysogenic Cycle • Some bacteriophages don’t immediately lyse their host cell • They can insert their DNA into the host’s DNA. • Now called a prophage • When the lysogenic cell (host cell) begins to exhibit the characteristics of the viral DNA (seen as new or unusual properties) then “conversion” has occurred. Lysogenic Cycle • How does this affect us? • The bacterium that cause certain diseases sometimes only cause them when they themselves have been infected by a virus (bacteriophage) • Ex. Diphtheria • Ex. Botulism Viroids • Are these alive? • Smaller, YES SMALLER than viruses! • Contain no proteins nor genes to code for proteins Prions • • • • • Are these alive? Prions are also smaller than viruses Proteinaceous infectious particles Made of protein and NO nucleic acid Responsible for transmissible spongiform encephalopathies • Mad cow disease (and Creutzfeldt-Jakob) • Chronic wasting disease Prokaryotes • • • • • • • • Include Archaea and Eubacteria Most are unicellular, but some form colonies or filaments Are these alive? Small cells Shapes: coccus, bacillus, spirillus, or shapeless Cell walls - to help them thrive in hypotonic media Eubacteria: If they have thick peptidoglycan walls, they stain purple (Gram +) • Thin peptidoglycan walls but thick outer layer of lipids and carbohydrates, they lose the purple and retain pink (Gram -) • Some have capsule, endospore, or pilus Prokaryotes Bacilli Cocci Spirilli Prokaryotes • If they lack peptidoglycan completely in their cell walls, they are probably Archaea • Single circular, highly folded DNA molecule • Plasmids • Binary fission • Heterotrophs: saprobes or symbiotic (diseasecausing parasites) • Autotrophs: chemo- or photo- • Most proks are aerobic • Some are facultative anaerobes and some are obligate anaerobes • Exchange of DNA (not sexual reproduction) there are three ways • Transformation - fragments taken up from a damaged cell or from the environment • Transduction - transferred by bacteriophage • Conjugation - exchange through pilus DNA Technology Bacteriophages Bacteriophages laid the foundation for recombinant DNA methods Restriction enzymes- molecular scissors Recognition sites - palindromic sequences AAGCTT and its complement TTCGAA “sticky ends” Joined with ligases Vectors Recombinant DNA is formed when DNA is spliced into a vector Common vectors: bacteriophages, plasmids, of BAC’s (bacterial artificial chromosomes) Temporarily houses the DNA Transformation The process of making the bacterial cell wall permeable to the plasmid is called transformation Puncturing the cell wall Chemically altering Heat shock We’ll be conducting a bacterial transformation lab where we splice two genes into E.coli Libraries How can you locate the gene of interest that you want to splice? Genomic library - fragments of all the DNA in a genome Put one of each human gene into a bacterial plasmid Chromosome library - all DNA fragments isolated from individual chromosomes Easier to use this to find your gene DNA fingerprinting & human genome project helped us to locate many genes on each chromosome Gene Splicing Choose the gene you’d like to splice and locate it Cut it out with restriction enzymes Cut the vector using the same restriction enzymes Mix the two types of DNA (ligase joins them) Transform the bacterium Allow the bacterium to reproduce Test to determine effectiveness Electrophoresis The other half of AP Lab 6 deals with DNA fingerprinting or electrophoresis Agarose - seaweed Filters DNA according to fragment length (molecular weight) Filters other molecules according to molecular weight, (size and shape), and charge Use stain to see results OR use radioactive DNA probe and UV light Electrophoresis DNA with radioactive probe - Southern blot RNA - Northern blot Protein or polypeptide molecules - Western blot One well-known use is to detect antibodies, such as antibodies to HIV Getting enough DNA to run in an electrophoresis requires amplification Make a lot more of the DNA samples PCR Polymerase Chain Reaction Heat the DNA - separate the strands Cool Add DNA polymerase (from Thermus aquaticus) and primers repeat Sequencing Another important purpose of electrophoresis is sequencing Chain Termination Method: Radioactively labeled primers DNA polymerase One of each of the four dideoxynucleotides These stop the addition of nucleotides to the chain; therefore, they cause the chain to stop when they are incorporated into a new strand This fragment (and all of the others) can then be separated based on fragment length Sequencing Automated: Much is now done by computers and machines using fluorescent dyes instead of radioactive labels ~1.5 million bases decoded in 24 hours Human genome = 3 billion base pairs Genomes of over 100 organisms have been sequenced (as of 2003) RFLPs (restriction fragment length polymorphisms) - comparison and measure of genetic relationships between genomes of different organisms Applications of Genetic Engineering Identifying genetic mutations Gene therapy Engineered proteins (ex. Insulin, growth hormone, clotting factor VIII, etc.) Transgenic animals and engineered proteins Determining the role of a particular gene Agricultural Environmental Criminal justice Research, cloning, medicine, etc.