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10/23/13 Chapter 8: Bacterial Genetics Genetic changes in bacteria occur via: -mutations -gene transfer 1 10/23/13 What are mutations? • Change in the base sequence of the DNA • Do they always change the genetic code? Causes of mutations in bacteria • • • • Most are spontaneous Errors made by DNA Polymerase UV light exposure Chemical damage of bases in DNA 2 10/23/13 Types of Mutations • Base-pair mutation – Missense mutation – Nonsense mutation – Silent mutation Base-pair mutations Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 5′ • • • • • •AT G • • • • • • C 3′ T A 3′ • • • •• • • • • • • •5′ DNA T G T A C A T G C A C G T G G A C C T G A A C T Mutation UG U UG C UG G UG A Transcribed codon Cysteine Cysteine Tryptophan Stop codon Amino acid translated Wild type Silent mutation Missense mutation Nonsense mutation Outcome 3 10/23/13 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Types of Mutations • • Frameshift Changes the reading frame Wild type 5′ 3′ 3′ C G G T A CG T T A A A G C C A T GCA A T T T DNA 5′ 5′ 3′ C G G Deletion or addition of nucleotides – Impact depends on number of nucleotides – Three pairs changes one codon •One amino acid more or less •One or two pairs yields frameshift mutation U A C Arginine Tyrosine GU U A A A Transcribed codons Valine Lysine Amino acids translated Mutant Base pair addition 3′ 5′ - Different set of codons translated - Often results in premature stop codon • Shortened, nonfunctional protein • Knockout mutation 3′ 5′ CGGA T A CG T T A A A G C C T A T G C A A T T T DNA 5′ 3′ C G G Arginine A U A C G U U A A Isoleucine Arginine Stop Transcribed codons Amino acids translated Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 5′ Base-pair mutation: missense 3′ 3′ 5′ DNA strand separation DNA replication 5′ 5′ 3′ 3′ 5′ DNA replication, an incorrect nucleotide is incorporated 3′ 5′ 3′ 3′ 5′ Wild type 3′ 5′ Base substitution 5′ DNA replication, generating a mutation 5′ 3′ Mutant 3′ DNA strand separation 3′ 5′ DNA replication 3′ 3′ 5′ 5′ 5′ 3′ Wild type 4 10/23/13 DNA Repair Can Prevent Mutations Figure 8.2 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. DNA Repair Can Prevent Mutations Repair Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Figure 8.2 5 10/23/13 DNA Repair Can Prevent Mutations Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Figure 8.2 What can cause mutations? • Chemicals (nitrous acid) • Physical mutagens (uv light) • Biological mutagens (transposons) 6 10/23/13 Barbara McClintock: jumping genes biological mutagen Transposons Can move from one location to another This jumping around is called transposition Genes are inactivated Function destroyed Most transposons have transcriptional terminators---Blocks expression of downstream genes • Induced mutations result from outside influence – Agent that induces change is mutagen – Geneticists may use mutagens to increase mutation rate – Two general types: chemical, radiation 7 10/23/13 • Chemical mutagens may cause base substitutions or frameshift mutations • Some chemicals modify nucleobases – Change base-pairing properties – Increase chance of incorrect nucleotide incorporation • Nitrous acid (HNO2) converts cytosine to uracil – Base-pairs with adenine instead of guanine Nitrous acid as a chemical mutagen 8 10/23/13 Alkylating agents add alkyl groups onto nucleobases Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Hydrogen bonds formed with complementary bases O O H N N N H N deoxyribose N H N Alkylating agent N H deoxyribose Guanine (pairs with C) Nitrosoguanidine adds methyl group to guanine N H H N Added alkyl group CH3 Base-pairs with thymine N H Methylguanine (sometimes pairs with T) (a) Wild type 3′ AGT T CA 3′ 5′ 5′ Nitrosoguanidine treatment 5′ 3′ A G *T T C A 3′ DNA replication 5′ Guanine (G) is converted to methylguanine (G*) 5′ 3′ A G*T T T A 3′ 5′ DNA replication Mutant 5′ 3′ A A T T TA 3′ 5′ Thymine (formerly paired Methylguanine of template strand pairs with thymine (T) with G*) now serves as template and pairs with instead of cytosine (C) adenine (A) (b) Nucleoside analogs are mutagens mistaken identity Base analogs resemble nucleobases -different hydrogenbonding properties - incorporated by DNA polymerase 5-bromouracil resembles thymine, (pairs with cytosine) 2-amino purine resembles adenine, can pair with cytosine 9 10/23/13 Intercalating agents cause frameshift mutations Flat molecules that insert between the base pairs in DNA strand Pushes nucleotides apart, produces space Causes errors during replication UV light as a mutagen X rays cause single- and double-strand breaks in DNA-can produce lethal deletions X rays can alter nucleobases 10 10/23/13 Repair mechanisms • Wrong nucleotide inserted – Proofreading – Mismatch repair Repair of Damaged DNA • Enormous amount of spontaneous and mutagen-induced damage to DNA – If not repaired, can lead to cell death; cancer in animals • E.g., in humans, two breast cancer susceptibility genes code for DNA repair enzymes; mutations in either result in 80% probability of breast cancer – Mutations are rare; alterations in DNA generally repaired before being passed to progeny – Several different DNA repair mechanisms 11 10/23/13 Repair of Errors in Nucleotide Incorporation – Mismatch Repair Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. • Fixes errors missed by DNA polymerase • Enzyme cuts sugar-phosphate backbone • Another enzyme degrades short region of DNA strand • Methylation of DNA indicates template strand – Methylation takes time, so newly synthesized strand is unmethylated • DNA polymerase, DNA ligase make repairs Template strand 1 3′ CH3 CH3 5′ 3′ C T A A G C T G A G G A T T T G A C T C 5′ The wrong nucleotide is incorporated during DNA synthesis. Newly synthesized strand 2 3′ CH3 CH3 5′ 3′ C T A A G C T G A G G A T T T G A C T C 5′ Near the site of the mismatched base, an enzyme cuts the sugar-phosphate backbone of the unmethylated strand. Cut 3 CH3 5′ CH3 C T A A G C T G A G G A C T C 3′ 5′ 3′ 5 3′ C T A A G C T G A G G A T T C G AC T C CH3 5′ CH3 5′ 3′ An enzyme degrades a short stretch of the strand that had the error. CH3 CH3 4 3′ 5′ C T A A G C T G A G G AT T C G A C T C DNA ligase 3′ 5′ DNA polymerase synthesizes a new stretch, incorporating the correct nucleotide. DNA ligase joins the 3′ end of the newly synthesized segment to the original strand. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Template strand 1 CH3 CH3 5′ Mismatch Repair 3′ 3′ C T A A G C T G A G G A T T T G A C T C 5′ The wrong nucleotide is incorporated during DNA synthesis. Newly synthesized strand 2 5′ 3′ CH3 CH3 3′ C T A A G C T G A G G A T T T G A C T C 5′ Near the site of the mismatched base, an enzyme cuts the sugar-phosphate backbone of the unmethylated strand. Cut 3 CH3 5′ CH3 C T A A G C T G A G G A C T C 3′ 5′ 3′ 5 3′ C T A A G C T G A G G A T T C G A C T C CH3 5′ CH3 5′ 3′ 5′ An enzyme degrades a short stretch of the strand that had the error. CH3 CH3 4 3′ C T A A G C T G A G G A T T C G A C T C DNA ligase 3′ 5′ DNA polymerase synthesizes a new stretch, incorporating the correct nucleotide. DNA ligase joins the 3′ end of the newly synthesized segment to the original strand. 12 10/23/13 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Photoreactivation Repair of UV damage Covalent bonds 5′ 3′ G C G A T T G A CG C G C T AA C T G C 3′ G C G A T T G A CG C G C T A A C T GC Thymine dimer distorts the DNA molecule. 5′ 3′ 5′ • Two repair mechanisms 3′ 5′ An enzyme uses visible light to break the covalent bond of the thymine dimer, restoring the DNA to its original state. Excision repair Covalent bonds – Light repair – Dark repair 5′ 3′ G C G A TT G A CG C G C T AA C T G C Cut 3′ 3′ G C CG C G C T A A C T GC 5′ 3′ Thymine dimer distorts the DNA molecule. 5′ Cut A T TGA G 5′ 3′ 5′ 3′ G C G A T T G A CG C G C T A A C T GC 5′ An enzyme removes the damaged section by cutting the DNA backbone on either side of the thymine dimer. The combined actions of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase fill in and seal the gap. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Repair of oxidation damage 1 5′ 3′ 2 A G– O C T C G T A 5′ 3′ C G T A A T A T C C G T A 5′ DNA contains oxidized guanine (G–O) as a result of oxidation damage. Glycosylase removes the oxidized nucleobase from the sugar-phosphate backbone. Cut 3′ C G T A A T C G T A T C T G A A T A T C C G T A T C C G T A A T G C C G T A 5′ 3′ 5 A T 5′ 3′ 4 T A 5′ 3′ 3 3′ C G 5′ 3′ 5′ 3′ 5′ 3′ 5′ At the site of the missing nucleobase, an enzyme cuts the sugar-phosphate backbone. DNA polymerase degrades a short stretch of the strand. The combined actions of DNA polymerase and DNA ligase fill in and seal the gap. 13 10/23/13 Repair of Thymine Dimers • Several methods to repair damage from UV light (continued…) – SOS repair: last-ditch repair mechanism • Induced following extensive DNA damage • Photoreactivation, excision repair unable to correct • DNA and RNA polymerases stall at unrepaired sites • Several dozen genes in SOS system activated – Includes a DNA polymerase that synthesizes even in extensively damaged regions – Has no proofreading ability, so errors made – Result is SOS mutagenesis Why use bacteria to study mutations? • Only have one chromosome…one copy of each gene • Easy to grow 14 10/23/13 Direct selection • Testing for traits that are easily identified – Colony color – Motility – Resistance to antibiotics Indirect selection • A way to look at traits that are not easy to detect – For example, changes in metabolism • Replica plating – A way to identify AUXOTROPHS from PROTOTROPHS 15 10/23/13 Replica Plating: indirect selection Penicillin enrichment of mutants Increases proportion of auxotrophs in broth culture Penicillin kills fast growing cells, the prototrophs) The auxotrophs survive. Penicillinase is then added. Cells plated on rich medium 16 10/23/13 Testing chemicals for mutagenicity…Ames test Mutant Selection – Ames test measures effect of chemical on reversion rate of histidine-requiring Salmonella auxotroph • Uses direct selection • If mutagenic, reversion rate increases relative to control • Rat liver extract added since non-carcinogenic chemicals often converted to carcinogens by animal enzymes • Additional tests then conducted on mutagenic chemicals to determine if carcinogenic 17