Bacterial Genome Flashcards

1
Q

How is bacterial shape determined

A

By genes

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2
Q

Which gene in caulobacter causes a curved shape

A

Crescent in

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3
Q

Name the 6 types of shapes bacteria can be

A

1- coccus (round)

2- rod (ecoli)

3- spirillum

4- spirochette (wavy)

5- stalk and hypha (budding and appendage)

6- filamentous (long and thin)

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4
Q

What is dna in bacteria condensed into

A

A nucleoid

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5
Q

How are genes switched on or off during rep

A

The dna unwinds from the nucleoid

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6
Q

Explain the genome of an ecoli

A

Circular chromosome

Haploid 1 copy of each chromosome

No introns

No histones

1 oric site

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7
Q

How many bp does ecoli have

A

4.6 million bp (4,300 genes)

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8
Q

On the chromosome of bacteria, there are clusters of genes expressed on same mrna. What is this called and give example

A

Operons

Eg lac ZYA

Same sigma factor and stop codon

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9
Q

Other than the lac operon, give another example

A

Trp operon

Produces tryptophan when needed to make amino acids
Contains 5 cluster genes

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10
Q

What is in the middle of a chromosome inside genomic dna

A

The NOT1 restriction sites

Sequences dna is cleaved and recognised

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11
Q

Why do plasmids on their genomic dna need to have replication functions

A

They replicate independently but coordinated to the chromosome to be passed onto daughter cells

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12
Q

Explain what transposons are on plasmids and how they work

A

Transposons are genes which can be transferred elsewhere ie gene knockin

They contain insert sequences recognised by proteins

which cases them to be cleaved from plasmid or chromosomes

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13
Q

What do transposons usually carry

A

Genes for antibiotic resistance

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14
Q

What are tra genes found on plasmids

A

Transfer genes

They encode for things like sex pili which allows conjugation/ transfer

(F plasmid has tra genes)

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15
Q

Other than plasmids , name 3 other mobile elements

A

1- bacteriophage transduction

2- transposons

3-integrons

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16
Q

What’s the difference between lytic phage and lysogenic phage

A

Lytic - enzymes get degraded and phages reassemble killing cell

Lysogenic - the insertion of dna is stable and doesn’t kill cell

17
Q

What allows a phage to bind to a cell

A

Tail fibres

18
Q

What on a phage allows it to inject dna

A

Base plate

19
Q

What are integrons

A

Pickup genes which can carry resistance from a cell to another

20
Q

What is the difference between the pan genome and core genome

A

Pan genome contains extra genes inherited via transfer like pathogenicity islands, transposons, conjugative plasmids

21
Q

Explain briefly the steps of next gen sequencing (alternative to dideoxy)

A

Fragmented ss dna is hybridised with adaptors (nucleotides) then added to flow cell

On to flow cell when adapter binds this causes dna replication via dna pol and bridging occurs across flow cell

This copies the ss dna like a PCR reaction when multiple copies

When primers attach this allows for the comp labelled nucleotides to bind and it shows sequence

22
Q

What is bioinformatics

A

After sequencing where amino acids are determined and the structure of the gene appears

Eg identifying the start and stop codon on the ORF

23
Q

Name some impacts sequencing and bioinformatics has had

A

1- follow evolution of bacteria and mutations (comparative genetics)

2- allows all mutations to be seen from a small piece of dna responsible for mutation

3- screening for presence of infection and allowing treatment best for them

4- comparing genome with small section rather than full gene mapping