microbial genetics grew from ____, led to ___ ____
microbiology
molecular biology
when did microbial genetics start
1940s-1950s
required development of 2 model systems for genetic investigations:
organization of bacterial genomes
single chromosome and plasmids
bacteriophage DNA can also be present
what is replicon?
chromosomes + plasmids in cell
plasmid copy # in cell is ___ regulated
CLOSELY
- diff plasmids can be copied diff times
plasmids typically ____ than genomes
smaller
T/F plasmids usually do not encode housekeeping codes
T
T/F antibiotic resistance genes uncommon in plasmids?
F
what is plasmid copy number governed by?
plasmid-encoded genes
plasmids with similar replication controls =?
incompatible (Inc)
why are bacteria ideal genetic research candidates
wild type meaning
mutant meaning
mutation meaning
allele meaning
variant of a gene
- may be gain of function
- may be loss of function
- may be change of function
auxotroph meaning
prototroph meaning
how are genes/proteins named generally?
genes
- three-letter abbr. in italics, followed by a capital letter to separate genes in same pathway
proteins
- given same three-letter designation, first letter capitalized, no italics
why do microbial geneticists compare wild-type strains and mutant strains?
goal: to identify differing alleles of genes
mutant selection
mutant screening
difference between selection vs screening
selection: cannot directly identify auxotroph on basis of growth
screening: can directly identify auxotroph through phenotype
what makes a mutation selectable or non-selectable?
selectable mutations generally give a growth advantage under specific conditions
- e.g., conditions that kill wild-type
- useful in genetic research
non-selectable mutations confer NO advantage or confers a DISadvantage
- detection requires screening of a large # of colonies