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Triparental Mating

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Triparental Mating! 13 June 2014
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Page 1: Triparental Mating

Triparental Mating!13 June 2014

Page 2: Triparental Mating

Classical Methods of Horizontal Gene Transfer

● Transformation● Transduction● Conjugation

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Furuya, et al. 2005. Antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in the community setting.

Page 4: Triparental Mating

Methods of Incorporating Foreign DNA into the Cell

● Transformationo Free DNA into “competent” recipient cello Natural competence is genetically determinedo Electroporation--high voltage makes cell envelope permeable

and facilitates transformationo Transfection--transformation with DNA extracted from bacterial

viruso Works “moderately well” in archaea by facilitating disassembly

of glycoprotein cell wall layer, also occasionally electroporation, approaches are more diverse and organism-dependent

Page 5: Triparental Mating

Methods of Incorporating Foreign DNA into the Cell

● Transductiono Bacteriophage transfers DNA from one cell to

anothero Generalized: donor genes cannot replicate

independentlyo Specialized: bacterial DNA incorporated into viral

genomeo Extremely rare in archaea, only one archaeal virus

has been shown to transduce genes of its host

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Methods of Incorporating Foreign DNA into the Cell

● Conjugationo Plasmid-mediated mechanism of transfer involving

cell to cell contacto Process involves donor cell with conjugative plasmid

and recipient strain withouto Two types of conjugation known in Archaea, one

using plasmids--genes encoding conjugative functions have little similarity with those in Bacteria

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F-plasmid mediated bacterial conjugation. Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Conjugation.svg

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(General) Mechanism of Conjugation

Four Components of Conjugative Apparatus● origin of transfer (oriT) site● gene for relaxase protein● type IV coupling protein● type IV secretion system

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Self-transmissible or conjugative plasmids code for the four components of a conjugative apparatus: an origin of transfer (oriT) (violet), a relaxase (R) (red), a type IV coupling protein (T4CP) (green), and a type IV secretion system (T4SS) (blue).

From Mobility of Plasmids, Smillie et al Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. September 2010 vol. 74 no. 3 434-452

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Plasmid Mobility “Types”

● Conjugative (self-transmissible), ● Mobilizable● Nonmobilizable (most plasmids larger than

300kb)

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(General) Mechanism of Conjugation

● All conjugative and mobilizable plasmids carry a gene for relaxase

● Relaxase catalyzes nicking of oriT (origin of transfer) site in donor plasmid and final ligation of transported DNA in recipient

● DNA replication occurs by rolling circle replication

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Replication and transfer of plasmid DNA during bacterial conjugation. From Brock Biology of Microorganisms 12th Edition

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(General) Mechanism of Conjugation

Mobilizable plasmids● Only need oriT, relaxase gene, and nicking

auxiliary proteins (forms relaxosome)● Will occasionally encode for type IV coupling

protein, which is involved in the connection between the relaxosome and the transport channel

Page 14: Triparental Mating

(General) Mechanism of Conjugation

Self-Transmissible● OriT, relaxase gene, and nicking auxiliary

proteins (forms relaxosome)● Type IV coupling protein● Type IV secretion system that forms

conjugative mating channel

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Triparental Mating

● Donor strain: contains mobilizable plasmid of interest

● Helper strain: has conjugative plasmid that can mobilize desired plasmid into recipient strain in trans

● Recipient strain

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Helper DonorConjugation

Step 1: conjugation initiated by self-mobilizable “helper plasmid” (red); helper plasmid is transconjugated into donor strain that contains plasmid with desired functions (green)

Donor

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DonorConjugation

Step 2: Green donor plasmid is mobilized in trans by helper, transfers desired donor plasmid into recipient cell

Recipient

Recipient

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Strains/plasmids used in experiment

● Donor: E.coli with pHC60 plasmid encoding constitutively expressed GFP, TetR constructed from broad-host range plasmid pSW213, RP4 transfer genes

● Helper: E.coli with prk600 conjugative helper, CmR, plasmid with RK2 transfer genes and ColE1 (narrow-range) replication origin

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Plasmid map of pHC60 encoding TetR , GFP, and an RP4 oriT site. From http://www.biovisualtech.com/bvplasmid/pHC60.jpg

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Strains/plasmids used in experiment

● Recipient: putative endophyte strains from Pseudomonadaceae, Xanthomonadaceae, Paenibacillaceae, Comamonadaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Rhizobiaceae

● No known selectable traits

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General Protocol

1. Mate all three strains on solid rich media2. Scrape up mating mix and select for desired

transconjugant using antibiotic media, etc -- however, do not know any selectable markers for recipient strains

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Donor Selecting for TetR (encoded in green plasmid) recovers both donor and recipient strains

Recipient

Mating Mix

Plate on media + Tet

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Donor

Can (ideally) select against E.coli by plating on M9+sucrose and select for desired transconjugant with antibiotics

Recipient

Mating Mix

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Spread plate of phc60 x prk600 pairwise control, plated on M9 + Sucrose on 4 June 2014. Picture taken 11 June 2014.

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Streak plate of putative

transconjugant (6ST2) for isolation. Plated 09 June, image taken 11

June 2014.

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DonorConjugation

Step 2: Green donor plasmid is mobilized in trans by helper, transfers desired donor plasmid into recipient cell

Recipient

Recipient

What happened to the helper plasmid (with respect to the recipient strain?)


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