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Bacteriophage Transduction Basics

Transduction is the transfer of genetic material between bacteria through bacteriophages. It was first discovered in 1952 by Joshua Lederberg and Norton Zinder during their experiments with Salmonella bacteria. There are two types of transduction: generalized transduction, where any fragment of bacterial DNA can be transferred by a lytic phage, and specialized transduction, where a specific fragment is transferred by a temperate phage. Transduction plays a role in bacterial evolution and allows for the study of gene linkage.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
175 views22 pages

Bacteriophage Transduction Basics

Transduction is the transfer of genetic material between bacteria through bacteriophages. It was first discovered in 1952 by Joshua Lederberg and Norton Zinder during their experiments with Salmonella bacteria. There are two types of transduction: generalized transduction, where any fragment of bacterial DNA can be transferred by a lytic phage, and specialized transduction, where a specific fragment is transferred by a temperate phage. Transduction plays a role in bacterial evolution and allows for the study of gene linkage.

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Batool Ashraf
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Transduction

BY: Vikas Kumar


1
Contents
• Historical

• Transduction

• Mechanism
• Bacteriophages and its life cycles

• Type of transduction
• Generalized Transduction
• Specialized Transduction

• Significance 2
historical
Lederberg & Zinder
• Transduction was first discovered in 1952 by Joshua
Lederberg and Norton Zinder

3
Joshua Lederberg Norton Zinder
How transduction was
discovered
• Studied in Salmonella typhimurium

• Plated two auxotrophic strains (LA-2 and LA-22)


individually on minimal medium, no cells grew.

• Plated a mixture of the two auxotrophic strains on


minimal medium, cells grew into colonies.

• Thus, genetic exchange was taking place between the


two cell types.

4
Unexpected discovery

U-tube Experiment

• Performed U-tube experiment .

• Found that part of the cells on one side of the U-tube


were prototrophs (could grow in minimal medium).

5
U-tube Experiment

6
Transduction

Definition - Unlike transformation in which the


naked DNA is transferred in transduction DNA is
carried by a bacteriophage.
or
In transduction, DNA is transferred from cell to cell
through the agency of viruses

NOTE :- All phages can be transducer and not all


bacteria are transducible
7
EXAMPLES OF
BACTERIA
Transduction has been found to occur in a variety
of prokaryotes, including certain species of the
Bacteria: Desulfovibrio, Escherichia,
Pseudomonas, Rhodococcus, Rhodobacter,
Salmonella, Staphylococcus, and Xanthobacter, as
well as Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum.

8
Mechanism of Transduction

Bacteriphage
• Firstly Descovered in 1915 by Fredrick Twort
and two years later by Felix d’Herelle.
• Means bacteria eater.

• A virus that infects certain type of bacteria and


replicates within them
9
Types of bacterio-phage
Virulent: capable of causing infection and
eventually destruction and death of the bacterial
cell. These follow the lytic cycle. e.g. T4 host
E.coli.

Temperate: does not cause destruptic infection


instead phage DNA is incorporated into
bacterium DNA and is replicated with it and after
some cycle become virulent cause lysis.
• e.g. lambda phage. 10
Life cycle of
bacteriophage

11
Transduction

• There are two types of transduction:

– Generalized transduction: A DNA


fragment is transferred from one bacterium
to another by a lytic bacteriophage that is
now carrying donor bacterial DNA due to an
error in maturation during the lytic life cycle.
12
Generalised Transduction

1. A lytic bacteriophage adsorbs to


a susceptible bacterium.

2. The bacteriophage genome


enters the bacterium. The genome
directs the bacterium's metabolic
machinery to manufacture
bacteriophage components and
enzymes
13
steps in Generalised Transduction (cont’d)

3. Occasionally, a bacteriophage head


or capsid assembles around a fragment
of donor bacterium's nucleoid instead
of a phage genome by mistake.

4. The bacteriophages are released.

14
steps in Generalised Transduction (cont’d)

5. The bacteriophage carrying the


donor bacterium's DNA adsorbs to a
recipient bacterium

6. The bacteriophage inserts the donor


bacterium's DNA it is carrying into the
recipient bacterium .

15
steps in Generalised Transduction (contd)

7. The donor bacterium's DNA is exchanged for some of


the recipient's DNA.

16
• Specialized transduction:
• A DNA fragment is transferred from one
bacterium to another by a temperate
bacteriophage that is now carrying donor
bacterial DNA due to an error in spontaneous
induction during the lysogenic life cycle.
• In specialized transduction the phage inserts
its genome at the specific site.

17
Specialised Transduction

1. A temperate bacteriophage adsorbs


to a susceptible bacterium and injects
its genome .

2. The bacteriophage inserts its genome


into the bacterium's nucleoid to become
a prophage.

18
Steps in Specialised Transduction (cont’d)

3. Occasionally during spontaneous


induction, a small piece of the donor
bacterium's DNA is picked up as part of
the phage's genome in place of some of
the phage DNA which remains in the
bacterium's nucleoid.

4. As the bacteriophage replicates, the


segment of bacterial DNA replicates as
part of the phage's genome. Every
phage now carries that segment of
bacterial DNA.

19
Steps in Specialised Transduction (cont’d)

5. The bacteriophage adsorbs to a


recipient bacterium and injects its
genome.

6. The bacteriophage genome carrying


the donor bacterial DNA inserts into the
recipient bacterium's nucleoid.

20
Significance of transduction
• It transfers genetic material from one bacterial cell to
another and alter the genetic characteristics.
• For example: In specialised transduction the gal gene, a cell
lacking ability to metabolize galactose could aquire the
ability .
• It shows the evolutionary relationship between the prophage
and host bacterial cell.
• Prophage can exist in a cell for a long period suggests a
similar possible mechanism for the viral origin of cancer.
• It provides a way to study the gene linkage.

21
THANKS

22

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