Jim's
Discussion Notes -
THE
GENETICS OF
VIRUSES
AND BACTERIA
(Campbell, Ch.18 and Johnson/Raven Ch.21)
·
Viruses
and bacteria are the simplest biological systems - microbial models where
scientists find life’s fundamental molecular mechanisms in their most basic,
accessible forms.
·
Microbiologists
provided most of the evidence that genes are made of DNA, and they worked out
most of the major steps in DNA replication, transcription, and translation.
·
Viruses
and bacteria also have interesting, unique genetic features with implications
for understanding diseases that they cause.
·
Bacteria
are prokaryotic organisms.
·
Their
cells are much smaller and more simply organized that those of eukaryotes, such
as plants and animals.
·
Viruses
are smaller and simpler still, lacking the structure and most metabolic
machinery in cells.
·
Most
viruses are little more than aggregates of nucleic acids and protein - genes in
a protein coat.
1. Researchers discovered viruses by studying a plant disease
·
The
story of how viruses were discovered begins in 1883 with research on the cause
of tobacco mosaic disease by Adolf Mayer.
·
This
disease stunts the growth and mottles plant leaves.
·
Mayer
concluded that the disease was infectious when he found that he could transmit
the disease by spraying sap from diseased leaves onto healthy plants.
·
He
concluded that the disease must be caused by an extremely small bacterium, but
Dimitri Ivanovsky demonstrated that the sap was still infectious even after
passing through a filter designed to remove bacteria.
·
In
1897 Martinus Beijerinck ruled out the possibility that the disease was due to
a filterable toxin produced by a bacterium and demonstrated that the infectious
agent could reproduce.
·
The
sap from one generation of infected plants could be used to infect a second
generation of plants that could infect subsequent generations.
·
Bierjink
also determined that the pathogen could reproduce only within the host, could
not be cultivated on nutrient media, and was not inactivated by alcohol,
generally lethal to bacteria.
·
In
1935, Wendell Stanley crystallized the pathogen, the tobacco mosaic virus
(TMV).
2. A virus
is a genome enclosed in a protective coat
·
Stanley’s
discovery that some viruses could be crystallized was puzzling because not even
the simplest cells can aggregate into regular crystals.
·
However,
viruses are not cells.
·
They
are infectious particles consisting of nucleic acid encased in a protein coat,
and, in some cases, a membranous envelope.
·
Viruses
range in size from only 20nm in diameter to that barely resolvable with a light
microscope.
·
The
genome of viruses includes other options than the double-stranded DNA that we
have studied.
·
Viral
genomes may consist of double-stranded DNA, single-stranded DNA,
double-stranded RNA, or single-stranded RNA, depending on the specific type of
virus.
·
The
viral genome is usually organized as a single linear or circular molecule of
nucleic acid.
·
The
smallest viruses have only four genes, while the largest have several hundred.
·
The
capsid is a protein shell enclosing
the viral genome.
·
Capsids
are build of a large number of protein subunits called capsomeres, but with limited diversity.
·
The
capsid of the tobacco mosaic virus has over 1,000 copies of the same protein.
·
Adenoviruses
have 252 identical proteins arranged into a polyhedral capsid - as an
icosahedron.
·
Some
viruses have viral envelopes,
membranes cloaking their capsids.
·
These
envelopes are derived from the membrane of the host cell.
·
They
also have some viral proteins and glycoproteins.
·
The
most complex capsids are found in viruses that infect bacteria, called bacteriophages or phages.
·
The
T-even phages that infect Escherichia
coli have a 20-sided capsid head that encloses their DNA and a protein tail
piece that attaches the phage to the host and injects the phage DNA inside.
3. Viruses
can reproduce only within a host cell: an
overview
·
Viruses
are obligate intracellular parasites.
·
They
can reproduce only within a host cell.
·
An
isolated virus is unable to reproduce - or do anything else, except infect an
appropriate host.
·
Viruses
lack the enzymes for metabolism or ribosomes for protein synthesis.
·
An
isolated virus is merely a packaged set of genes in transit from one host cell
to another.
·
Each
type of virus can infect and parasitize only a limited range of host cells,
called its host range.
·
Viruses
identify host cells by a “lock-and-key” fit between proteins on the outside of
virus and specific receptor molecules on the host’s surface.
·
Some
viruses (like the rabies virus) have a broad enough host range to infect
several species, while others infect only a single species.
·
Most
viruses of eukaryotes attack specific tissues.
·
Human
cold viruses infect only the cells lining the upper respiratory tract.
·
The
AIDS virus binds only to certain white blood cells.
·
A
viral infection begins when the genome of the virus enters the host cell.
·
Once
inside, the viral genome commandeers its host, reprogramming the cell to copy
viral nucleic acid and manufacture proteins from the viral genome.
·
The
nucleic acid molecules and capsomeres then self-assemble into viral particles
and exit the cell.
4. Phages
reproduce using lytic or lysogenic cycles
·
While
phages are the best understood of all viruses, some of them are also among the
most complex.
·
Research
on phages led to the discovery that some double-stranded DNA viruses can
reproduce by two alternative mechanisms: the lytic cycle and the lysogenic
cycle.
·
In
the lytic cycle, the phage
reproductive cycle culminates in the death of the host.
·
In
the last stage, the bacterium lyses (breaks open) and releases the phages
produced within the cell to infect others.
·
Virulent phages reproduce only by a lytic
cycle.
·
While
phages have the potential to wipe out a bacterial colony in just hours,
bacteria have defenses against phages.
·
Natural
selection favors bacterial mutants with receptors sites that are no longer
recognized by a particular type of phage.
·
Bacteria
produce restriction nucleases that
recognize and cut up foreign DNA, including certain phage DNA.
·
Modifications
to the bacteria’s own DNA prevent its destruction by restriction nucleases.
·
But,
natural selection favors resistant phage mutants.
·
In
the lysogenic cycle, the phage
genome replicates without destroying the host cell.
·
Temperate phages, like phage lambda, use
both lytic and lysogenic cycles.
·
Within
the host, the virus’ circular DNA engages in either the lytic or lysogenic
cycle.
·
During
a lytic cycle, the viral genes immediately turn the host cell into a
virus-producing factory, and the cell soon lyses and releases its viral
products.
·
During
the lysogenic cycle, the viral DNA molecule, is incorporated by genetic
recombination into a specific site on the host cell’s chromosome.
·
In
this prophage stage, one of its
genes codes for a protein that represses most other prophage genes.
·
Every
time the host divides, it also copies the viral DNA and passes the copies to
daughter cells.
·
Occasionally,
the viral genome exits the bacterial chromosome and initiates a lytic cycle.
·
This
switch from lysogenic to lytic may be initiated by an environmental trigger.
·
The
lambda phage that infects E. coli
demonstrates the cycles of a temperate phage.
5. Animal viruses are diverse in their modes of
infection and replication
·
Many
variations on the basic scheme of viral infection and reproduction are
represented among animal viruses.
·
One
key variable is the type of nucleic acid that serves as a virus’s genetic
material.
·
Another
variable is the presence or absence of a membranous envelope.
·
Viruses
equipped with an outer envelope use the envelope to enter the host cell.
·
Glycoproteins
on the envelope bind to specific receptors on the host’s membrane.
·
The
envelope fuses with the host’s membrane, transporting the capsid and viral
genome inside.
·
The
viral genome duplicates and directs the host’s protein synthesis machinery to
synthesize capsomeres with free ribosomes and glycoproteins with bound
ribosomes.
·
After
the capsid and viral genome self-assemble, they bud from the host cell covered
with an envelope derived from the host’s plasma membrane, including viral
glycoproteins.
·
These
enveloped viruses do not necessarily kill the host cell.
·
Some
viruses have envelopes that are not derived from plasma membrane.
·
The
envelope of the herpesvirus is derived from the nuclear envelope of the host.
·
These
double-stranded DNA viruses reproduce within the cell nucleus using viral and
cellular enzymes to replicate and transcribe their DNA.
·
Herpesvirus
DNA may become integrated into the cell’s genome as a provirus.
·
The
provirus remains latent within the
nucleus until triggered by physical or emotional stress to leave the genome and
initiate active viral production.
·
The
viruses that use RNA as the genetic material are quite diverse, especially
those that infect animals.
·
In
some with single-stranded RNA (class IV), the genome acts as mRNA and is
translated directly.
·
In
others (class V), the RNA genome serves as a template for mRNA and for a complementary RNA.
·
This
complementary strand is the template for the synthesis of additional copies of
genome RNA.
·
All
viruses that require RNA -> RNA synthesis to make mRNA use a viral enzyme
that is packaged with the genome inside the capsid.
·
Retroviruses (class VI) have the most
complicated life cycles.
·
These
carry an enzyme, reverse transcriptase,
which transcribes DNA from an RNA template.
·
The
newly made DNA is inserted as a provirus into a chromosome in the animal cell.
·
The
host’s RNA polymerase transcribes the viral DNA into more RNA molecules.
·
These
can function both as mRNA for the synthesis of viral proteins and as genomes
for new virus particles released from the cell.
·
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the virus that causes AIDS
(acquired immunodeficiency syndrome)
is a retrovirus.
·
The
viral particle includes an envelope with glycoproteins for binding to specific
types of red blood cells, a capsid containing two identical RNA strands as its
genome and two copies of reverse transcriptase.
·
The
reproductive cycle of HIV illustrates the pattern of infection and replication
in a retrovirus.
·
After
HIV enters the host cell, reverse transcriptase synthesizes double stranded DNA
from the viral RNA.
·
Transcription
produces more copies of the viral RNA that are translated into viral proteins,
which self-assemble into a virus
particle and leave the host.
·
The
link between viral infection and the symptoms it produces is often obscure.
·
Some
viruses damage or kill cells by triggering the release of hydrolytic enzymes
from lysosomes.
·
Some
viruses cause the infected cell to produce toxins that lead to disease
symptoms.
·
Others
have molecular components, such as envelope proteins, that are toxic.
·
In
some cases, viral damage is easily repaired (respiratory epithelium after a
cold), but in others, infection causes permanent damage (nerve cells after
polio).
·
Many
of the temporary symptoms associated with a viral infection results from the
body’s own efforts at defending itself against infection.
·
The
immune system is a complex and critical part of the body’s natural defense
mechanism against viral and other infections.
·
Modern
medicine has developed vaccines,
harmless variants or derivatives of pathogenic microbes, which stimulate the
immune system to mount defenses against the actual pathogen.
·
The
first vaccine was developed in the late 1700s by Edward Jenner to fight
smallpox.
·
Jenner
learned from his patients that milkmaids who had contracted cowpox, a milder
disease that usually infects cows, were resistant to smallpox.
·
In
his famous experiment in 1796, Jenner infected a farm boy with cowpox, acquired
from the sore of a milkmaid with the disease.
·
When
exposed to smallpox, the boy resisted the disease.
·
Because
of their similarities, vaccination with the cowpox virus sensitizes the immune
system to react vigorously if exposed to actual smallpox virus.
·
Effective
vaccines against many other viruses exist.
·
Vaccines
can help prevent viral infections, but they can do little to cure most viral
infection once they occur.
·
Antibiotics,
which can kill bacteria by inhibiting enzymes or processes specific to
bacteria, are powerless against viruses, which have few or no enzymes of their
own.
·
Some
recently developed drugs do combat some viruses, mostly by interfering with
viral nucleic acid synthesis.
·
AZT
interferes with reverse transcriptase of HIV.
·
Acyclovir
inhibits herpesvirus DNA synthesis.
·
In
recent years, several very dangerous “emergent viruses” have risen to
prominence.
·
HIV,
the AIDS virus, seemed to appear suddenly in the early 1980s.
·
Each
year new strains of influenza virus cause millions to miss work or class, and
deaths are not uncommon.
·
The
deadly Ebola virus has caused hemorrhagic fevers in central Africa periodically
since 1976.
·
The
emergence of these new viral diseases is due to three processes: mutation,
spread of existing viruses from one species to another, and dissemination of a
viral disease from a small, isolated population.
·
Mutation
of existing viruses is a major source of new viral diseases.
·
RNA
viruses tend to have high mutation rates because replication of their nucleic
acid lacks proofreading.
·
Some
mutations create new viral strains with sufficient genetic differences from
earlier strains that they can infect individuals who had acquired immunity to
these earlier strains.
·
This
is the case in flu epidemics.
·
Another
source of new viral diseases is the spread of existing viruses from one host
species to another.
·
It
is estimated that about three-quarters of new human diseases have originated in
other animals.
·
For
example, hantavirus, which killed dozens of people in 1993, normally infects
rodents, especially deer mice.
·
That
year unusually wet weather in the southwestern U.S. increased the mice’s food,
exploding its population.
·
Humans
acquired hantavirus when they inhaled dust containing traces of urine and feces
from infected mice.
·
Finally,
a viral disease can spread from a small, isolated population to a widespread
epidemic.
·
For
example, AIDS went unnamed and virtually unnoticed for decades before spreading
around the world.
·
Technological
and social factors, including affordable international travel, blood
transfusion technology, sexual promiscuity, and the abuse of intravenous drugs,
allowed a previously rare disease to become a global scourge.
·
These
emerging viruses are generally not new. Rather, they are existing viruses that
expand their host territory.
·
Environmental
change can increase the viral traffic responsible for emerging disease.
·
Since
1911, when Peyton Rous discovered that a virus causes cancer in chickens,
scientists have recognized that some viruses cause animal cancers.
·
These tumor viruses include retrovirus,
papovavirus, adenovirus, and herpesvirus types.
·
Viruses
appear to cause certain human cancers.
·
The
hepatitis B virus is associated with liver cancer.
·
The
Epstein-Barr virus, which causes infectious mononucleosis, has been linked to
several types of cancer in parts of Africa, notably Burkitt’s lymphoma.
·
Papilloma
viruses are associated with cervical cancers.
·
The
HTLV-1 retrovirus causes a type of adult leukemia.
·
All
tumor viruses transform cells into cancer cells after integration of viral
nucleic acid into host DNA.
·
Viruses
may carry oncogenes that trigger cancerous
characteristics in cells.
·
These
oncogenes are often versions of proto-oncogenes
that influence the cell cycle in normal cells.
·
Proto-oncogenes
generally code for growth factors or proteins involved in growth factor
function.
·
In
other cases, a tumor virus transforms a cell by turning on or increasing the
expression of proto-oncogenes.
·
It
is likely that most tumor viruses cause cancer only in combination with other
mutagenic events.
6. Plant
viruses are serious agricultural pests
·
Plant
viruses can stunt plant growth and diminish crop yields.
·
Most
are RNA viruses with rod-shaped capsids produced by a spiral of capsomeres.
·
Plant
viral diseases are spread by two major routes.
·
In
horizontal transmission, a plant is
infected with the virus by an external source.
·
Plants
are more susceptible if their protective epidermis is damaged, perhaps by wind,
chilling, injury, or insects.
·
Insects
are often carriers of viruses, transmitting disease from plant to plant.
·
In
vertical transmission, a plant
inherits a viral infection from a parent.
·
This
may occurs by asexual propagation or in sexual reproduction via infected seeds.
·
Once
it starts reproducing inside a plant cell, virus particles can spread
throughout the plant by passing through plasmodermata.
·
These
cytoplasmic connections penetrate the walls between adjacent cells.
·
Agricultural
scientists have focused their efforts largely on reducing the incidence and
transmission of viral disease and in breeding resistant plant varieties.
7. Viroids and prions are infectious agents even
simpler than viruses
·
Viroids, smaller and simpler than
even viruses, consist of tiny molecules of naked circular RNA that infect
plants.
·
Their
several hundred nucleotides do not encode for proteins but can be replicated by
the host’s cellular enzymes.
·
These
RNA molecules can disrupt plant metabolism and stunt plant growth, perhaps by
causing errors in the regulatory systems that control plant growth.
·
Prions are infectious proteins that spread a disease.
·
They
appear to cause several degenerative brain diseases including scrapie in sheep,
“mad cow disease,” and Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease in humans.
·
According
to the leading hypothesis, a prion is a misfolded form of a normal brain
protein.
·
It
can then convert a normal protein into the prion version, creating a chain
reaction that increases their numbers.
8. Viruses may have evolved from other mobile
genetic elements
·
Viruses
are in the semantic fog between life and nonlife.
·
An
isolated virus is biologically inert and yet it has a genetic program written
in the universal language of life.
·
Although
viruses are obligate intracellular parasites that cannot reproduce
independently, it is hard to deny their evolutionary connection to the living
world.
·
Because
viruses depend on cells for their own propagation, it is reasonable to assume
that they evolved after the first
cells appeared.
·
Most
molecular biologists favor the hypothesis that viruses originated from
fragments of cellular nucleic acids that could move from one cell to another.
·
A
viral genome usually has more in common with the genome of its host than with
those of viruses infecting other hosts.
·
Perhaps
the earliest viruses were naked bits of nucleic acids that passed between cells
via injured cell surfaces.
·
The
evolution of capsid genes may have facilitated the infection of undamaged
cells.
·
Candidates
for the original sources of viral genomes include plasmids and transposons.
·
Plasmids
are small, circular DNA molecules that are separate from chromosomes.
·
Plasmids,
found in bacteria and in the eukaryote yeast, can replicate independently of
the rest of the cell and are occasionally transferred between cells.
·
Transposons
are DNA segments that can move from one location to another within a cell’s
genome.
·
Both
plasmids and transposons are mobile genetic elements.
1. The short generation span of bacteria helps them adapt to changing environments
·
Bacteria
are very adaptable.
·
This
is true in the evolutionary sense of adaptation via natural selection and the
physiological sense of adjustment to changes in the environment by individual
bacteria.
·
The
major component of the bacterial genome is one double-stranded, circular DNA
molecule.
·
For
E. coli, the chromosomal DNA consists
of about 4.6 million nucleotide pairs with about 4,300 genes.
·
This
is 100 times more DNA than in a typical virus and 1,000 times less than in a
typical eukaryote cell.
·
Tight
coiling of the DNA results in a dense region of DNA, called the nucleoid, not bound by a membrane.
·
In
addition, many bacteria have plasmids, much smaller circles of DNA.
·
Each
plasmid has only a small number of genes, from just a few to several dozen.
·
Bacterial
cells divide by binary fission.
·
This
is preceded by replication of the bacterial chromosome from a single origin of
replication.
·
Bacteria
proliferate very rapidly in a favorable natural or laboratory environment.
·
Under
optimal laboratory conditions E. coli
can divide every 20 minutes, producing a colony of 107 to 108
bacteria in as little as 12 hours.
·
In
the human colon, E. coli reproduces rapidly
enough to replace the 2 x 1010 bacteria lost each day in feces.
·
Through
binary fission, most of the bacteria in a colony are genetically identical to
the parent cell.
·
However,
the spontaneous mutation rate of E. coli
is 1 x 10-7 mutations per gene per cell division.
·
This
will produce about 2,000 bacteria in the human colon that have a mutation in
that gene per day.
·
New
mutations, though individually rare, can have a significant impact on genetic
diversity when reproductive rates are very high because of short generation
spans.
·
Individual
bacteria that are genetically well equipped for the local environment clone
themselves more prolifically than do less fit individuals.
·
In
contrast, organisms with slower reproduction rates (like humans) create most genetic
variation not by novel alleles produced through mutation, but by sexual
recombination of existing alleles.
2. Genetic recombination produces new bacterial strains
·
In
addition to mutations, genetic recombination generates diversity within
bacterial populations.
·
Here,
recombination is defined as the combining of DNA from two individuals into a
single genome.
·
Recombination
occurs through three processes:
·
Transformation
·
Transduction
·
Conjugation
·
The
impact of recombination can be observed when two mutant E. coli strains are combined.
·
If
each is unable to synthesize one of its required amino acids, neither can grow
on a minimal medium.
·
However,
if they are combined, numerous colonies will be created that started as cells
that acquired the missing genes for amino acid synthesis from the other strain.
·
Some
may have resulted from mutation.
·
Transformation is the alteration of a
bacterial cell’s genotype by the uptake of naked, foreign DNA from the
surrounding environment.
·
For
example, harmless Streptococcus pneumoniae
bacteria can be transformed to pneumonia-causing cells.
·
This
occurs when a live nonpathogenic cell takes up a piece of DNA that happens to
include the allele for pathogenicity from dead, broken-open pathogenic cells.
·
The
foreign allele replaces the native allele in the bacterial chromosome by
genetic recombination.
·
The
resulting cell is now recombinant with DNA derived from two different cells.
·
Many
bacterial species have surface proteins that are specialized for the uptake of
naked DNA.
·
These
proteins recognize and transport only DNA from closely related bacterial
species.
·
While
E. coli lacks this specialized
mechanism, it can be induced to take up small pieces of DNA if cultured in a
medium with a relatively high concentration of calcium ions.
·
In
biotechnology, this technique has been used to introduce foreign DNA into E. coli.
·
Transduction occurs when a phage carries
bacterial genes from one host cell to another.
·
In
generalized transduction, a small
piece of the host cell’s degraded DNA is packaged within a capsid, rather than
the phage genome.
·
When
this phage attaches to another bacterium, it will inject this foreign DNA into
its new host.
·
Some
of this DNA can subsequently replace the homologous region of the second cell.
·
This
type of transduction transfers bacterial genes at random.
·
Specialized transduction occurs via a temperate
phage.
·
When
the prophage viral genome is excised from the chromosome, it sometimes takes
with it a small region of adjacent bacterial DNA.
·
These
bacterial genes are injected along with the phage’s genome into the next host
cell.
·
Specialized
transduction only transfers those genes near the prophage site on the bacterial
chromosome.
·
Both
generalized and specialized transduction use phage as a vector to transfer
genes between bacteria.
·
Conjugation transfers genetic material
between two bacterial cells that are temporarily joined.
·
One
cell (“male”) donates DNA and its “mate” (“female”) receives the genes.
·
A
sex pilus from the male initially joins the two cells and creates a cytoplasmic
bridge between cells.
·
“Maleness,”
the ability to form a sex pilus and donate DNA, results from an F factor as a section of the bacterial
chromosome or as a plasmid.
·
Plasmids, including the F plasmid,
are small, circular, self-replicating DNA molecules.
·
Episomes, like the F plasmid, can
undergo reversible incorporation into the cell’s chromosome.
·
Temperate
viruses also qualify as episomes.
·
Plasmids
generally benefit the bacterial cell.
·
They
usually have only a few genes that are not required for normal survival and
reproduction.
·
Plasmid
genes are advantageous in stressful conditions.
·
The
F plasmid facilitates genetic recombination when environmental conditions no
longer favor existing strains.
·
The
F factor or its F plasmid consists
of about 25 genes, most required for the production of sex pili.
·
Cells
with either the F factor or the F plasmid are called F+ and they
pass this condition to their offspring.
·
Cells
lacking either form of the F factor, are called F-, and they
function as DNA recipients.
·
When
an F+ and F- cell meet, the F+ cell passes a
copy of the F plasmid to the F- cell, converting it.
·
The
plasmid form of the F factor can become integrated into the bacterial
chromosome.
·
The
resulting Hfr cell (high frequency of recombination) functions as a male during
conjugation.
·
The
Hfr cell initiates DNA replication at a point on the F factor DNA and begins to
transfer the DNA copy from that point to its F- partner
·
Random
movements almost always disrupt conjugation long before an entire copy of the
Hfr chromosome can be passed to the F- cell.
·
In
the partially diploid cell, the newly acquired DNA aligns with the homologous
region of the F- chromosome.
·
Recombination
exchanges segments of DNA.
·
This
recombinant bacteria has genes from two different cells.
·
In
the 1950s, Japanese physicians began to notice that some bacterial strains had
evolved antibiotic resistance.
·
The
genes conferring resistance are carried by plasmids, specifically the R plasmid (R for resistance).
·
Some
of these genes code for enzymes that specifically destroy certain antibiotics,
like tetracycline or ampicillin.
·
When
a bacterial population is exposed to an antibiotic, individuals with the R
plasmid will survive and increase in the overall population.
·
Because
R plasmids also have genes that encode for sex pili, they can be transferred
from one cell to another by conjugation.
·
A
transposon is a piece of DNA that
can move from one location to another in a cell’s genome.
·
Transposon
movement occurs as a type of recombination between the transposon and another
DNA site, a target site.
·
In
bacteria, the target site may be within the chromosome, from a plasmid to
chromosome (or vice versa), or between plasmids.
·
Transposons
can bring multiple copies for antibiotic resistance into a single R plasmid by
moving genes to that location from different plasmids.
·
This
explains why some R plasmids convey resistance to many antibiotics.
·
Some
transposons (so called “jumping genes”) do jump from one location to another
(cut-and-paste translocation).
·
However,
in replicative transposition, the transposon replicates at its original site,
and a copy inserts elsewhere.
·
Most
transposons can move to many alternative locations in the DNA, potentially
moving genes to a site where genes of that sort have never before existed.
·
The
simplest bacterial transposon, an insertion
sequence, consists only of the DNA necessary for the act of transposition.
·
The
insertion sequence consists of the transposase gene, flanked by a pair of inverted repeat sequences.
·
The
20 to 40 nucleotides of the inverted repeat on one side are repeated in reverse
along the opposite DNA strand at the other end of the transposon.
·
The
transposase enzyme recognizes the inverted repeats as the edges of the
transposon.
·
Transposase
cuts the transposon from its initial site and inserts it into the target site.
·
Gaps
in the DNA strands are filled in by DNA polymerase, creating direct repeats, and then DNA ligase
seals the old and new material.
·
Insertion
sequences cause mutations when they happen to land within the coding sequence
of a gene or within a DNA region that regulates gene expression.
·
Insertion
sequences account for 1.5% of the E. coli
genome, but a mutation in a particular gene by transposition is rare, about 1
in every 10 million generations.
·
This
is about the same rate as spontaneous mutations from external factors.
·
Composite transposons (complex transposons)
include extra genes sandwiched between two insertion sequences.
·
It
is as though two insertion sequences happened to land relatively close together
and now travel together, along with all the DNA between them, as a single
transposon.
·
While
insertion sequences may not benefit bacteria in any specific way, composite
transposons may help bacteria adapt to new environments.
·
For
example, repeated movements of resistance genes by composite transposition may
concentrate several genes for antibiotic resistance onto a single R plasmid.
·
In
an antibiotic-rich environment, natural selection factors bacterial clones that
have built up composite R plasmids through a series of transpositions.
·
Transposable
genetic elements are important components of eukaryotic genomes as well.
·
In
the 1940s and 1950s Barbara McClintock investigated changes in the color of
corn kernels.
·
She
postulated that the changes in kernel color only made sense if mobile genetic
elements moved from other locations in the genome to the genes for kernel
color.
·
When
these “controlling elements” were inserted next to the genes responsible for
kernel color, they would activate or inactivate those genes.
·
In
1983, more than 30 years after her initial break-through, Dr. McClintock
received a Nobel Prize for her discovery.
3. The control of gene expression enables individual bacteria to adjust their metabolism to environmental change
·
An
individual bacterium, locked into the genome that it has inherited, can cope
with environmental fluctuations by exerting metabolic control.
·
First,
cells vary the number of specific enzyme molecules by regulating gene
expression.
·
Second,
cells adjust the activity of enzymes already present (for example, by feedback
inhibition).
·
For
example, the tryptophan biosynthesis pathway demonstrates both levels of
control.
·
If
tryptophan levels are high, some of the tryptophan molecules can inhibit the
first enzyme in the pathway.
·
If
the abundance of tryptophan continues, the cell can stop synthesizing
additional enzymes in this pathway by blocking transcription of the genes for
these enzymes.
·
In
1961, Francois Jacob and Jacques Monod proposed the operon model for the
control of gene expression in bacteria.
·
An
operon consists of three elements:
·
The
genes that it controls.
·
In
bacteria, the genes coding for the enzymes of a particular pathway are
clustered together and transcribed (or not) as one long mRNA molecule.
·
A
promotor region where RNA polymerase first binds.
·
An
operator region between the promotor
and the first gene that acts as an “on-off switch.”
·
By
itself, an operon is on and RNA polymerase can bind to the promotor and
transcribe the genes.
·
However,
if a repressor protein, a product of
a regulatory gene, binds to the
operator, it can prevent transcription of the operon’s genes.
·
Each
repressor protein recognizes and binds only to the operator of a certain
operon.
·
Regulatory
genes are transcribed continuously at low rates.
·
Binding
by the repressor to the operator is reversible.
·
The
number of active repressor molecules available determines the on and off mode
of the operator.
·
Many
repressors contain allosteric sites that change shape depending on the binding
of other molecules.
·
In
the case of the trp operon, when
concentrations of tryptophan in the cell are high, some tryptophan molecules
bind as a corepressor to the
repressor protein.
·
This
activates the repressor and turns the operon off.
·
At
low levels of tryptophan, most of the repressors are inactive and the operon is
transcribed.
·
The
trp operon is an example of a repressible operon, one that is inhibited when a specific small molecule
binds allosterically to a regulatory protein.
·
In
contrast, an inducible operon is stimulated when a specific small
molecule interacts with a regulatory protein.
·
In
inducible operons, the regulatory protein is active (inhibitory) as
synthesized, and the operon is off.
·
Allosteric
binding by an inducer molecule makes
the regulatory protein inactive, and the operon is on.
·
The
lac operon contains a series of genes
that code for enzymes that play a major role in the hydrolysis and metabolism
of lactose.
·
In
the absence of lactose, this operon is off as an active repressor binds to the
operator and prevents transcription.
·
When
lactose is present in the cell, allolactase, an isomer of lactose, binds to the
repressor.
·
This
inactivates the repressor, and the lac
operon can be transcribed.
·
Repressible
enzymes generally function in anabolic pathways, synthesizing end products.
·
When
the end product is present in sufficient quantities, the cell can allocate its
resources to other uses.
·
Inducible
enzymes usually function in catabolic pathways, digesting nutrients to simpler
molecules.
·
By
producing the appropriate enzymes only when the nutrient is available, the cell
avoids making proteins that have nothing to do.
·
Both
repressible and inducible operons demonstrate negative control because active repressors can only have negative
effects on transcription.
·
Positive
gene control occurs when an activator molecule interacts directly with the
genome to switch transcription on.
·
Even
if the lac operon is turned on by the
presence of allolactose, the degree of transcription depends on the
concentrations of other substrates.
·
If
glucose levels are low (along with overall energy levels), then cyclic AMP (cAMP) binds to cAMP receptor
protein (CRP) which activates
transcription.
·
The
cellular metabolism is biased toward the utilization of glucose.
·
If
glucose levels are sufficient and cAMP levels are low (lots of ATP), then the
CRP protein has an inactive shape and cannot bind upstream of the lac promotor.
·
The
lac operon will be transcribed but at
a low level.
·
For
the lac operon, the presence /
absence of lactose (allolactose) determines if the operon is on or off.
·
Overall
energy levels in the cell determine the level of transcription, a “volume”
control, through CRP.
·
CRP
works on several operons that encode enzymes used in catabolic pathways.
·
If
glucose is present and CRP is inactive, then the synthesis of enzymes that
catabolize other compounds is slowed.