Describe bacterial DNA.
Single, large circular DNA molecule
What is a plasmid?
A small circular DNA molecule separate from the bacterial chromosome
What is an episome?
Bacterial chromosome w/ plasmid integrated into it
Polycystroic mRNA
Polycistronic mRNA carries several open reading frames (ORFs), each of which is translated into a polypeptide
Describe the mechanism of repression/ negative gene regulation.
Normally, a repressor binds the operator–something must alter the repressor & remove it for RNA polymerase to bind & transcribe the gene
Describe the mechanism of activation/ positive gene regulation.
Activator binds the activator region, recruiting RNA polymerase & leading to gene transcription
Vertical Gene Transfer vs. Horizontal Gene Transfer
How does bacterial evolution occur via vertical gene transfer? Is this type of evolution fast or slow?
By what mechanism do bacterial traits evolve quickly?
Horizontal gene transfer
What is homologous recombination? What enzyme mediates homologous recombination?
Homologous recombination is the exchange of DNA between two similar DNA sequences, which requires the enzyme, RecA
What is transformation?
Uptake of free DNA from the environment
What is conjugation?
DNA transfer directly from one bacterial cell to another via cell contact
What is F-Factor?
Fertility Factor that encodes the sex pilus; contains two important genes, the Tra Operon & the OriT
What is the Tra Operon?
Gene of the F-factor that encodes the components of the sex pilus
What is the OriT?
- Where a single strand break occurs for transfer
What is a Hfr?
High Frequency Recombination, when the F-factor is integrated into bacterial chromosome
Describe the mechanism of F+ x F- conjugation.
1) Sex pilus bridge forms
2) 1 strand of F-plasmid beginning of OriT is “shot” into recipient w/ Tra region behind
3) Recipient undergoes a “sex change” & is now F+
What is transduction?
Transfer of bacterial DNA by bacteriophage
What is bacteriophage?
Bacterial viruses
- Bind cell membrane & inject DNA into bacterial cell
What is the difference between Lytic & Lysogenic bacteriophages?
- Lysogenic= integration of phage DNA followed by quiescence until demise of bacteria–>lytic
What is generalized transduction?
Process by which a lytic phage incorporates bacterial chromosomal DNA into its phage head. When the phage infects another bacteria, transduced DNA can be incorporated into the chromosome of the new cell via homologous recombination.
In contrast to generalized transduction, which is specialized transduction?
A lysogenic phage incorporates into the chromosome as a prophage. Something (e.g. UV damage) triggers conversion to lytic cycle. Upon excision, phage cuts out some adjacent host DNA & then goes on to infect other cells.
What is Intrinsic Antibiotic Resistance?
Lack of an antibiotic target e.g. mycoplasma does NOT have peptidoglycan thus, no target
- NOT transferable & NOT increasing among bacterial populations
What is Chromosome-Mediated Antibiotic Resistance?
Chromosomal genes encoding antibiotic resistance