This document summarizes Seymour Benzer's experiments mapping mutations within the rII gene of bacteriophage T4. Benzer isolated thousands of rII mutants and constructed a fine-scale genetic map by crossing mutants and calculating recombination frequencies. The rII gene controls lysis and host range - rII mutants form large plaques on permissive E. coli B but not on restrictive E. coli K. By infecting E. coli B with two rII mutants, Benzer could screen for wild-type recombinants that form plaques on both bacterial strains, establishing that genetic recombination occurs within genes. This work provided evidence against the "bead model" of genes and supported the idea that genes are complex functional units
This document summarizes Seymour Benzer's experiments mapping mutations within the rII gene of bacteriophage T4. Benzer isolated thousands of rII mutants and constructed a fine-scale genetic map by crossing mutants and calculating recombination frequencies. The rII gene controls lysis and host range - rII mutants form large plaques on permissive E. coli B but not on restrictive E. coli K. By infecting E. coli B with two rII mutants, Benzer could screen for wild-type recombinants that form plaques on both bacterial strains, establishing that genetic recombination occurs within genes. This work provided evidence against the "bead model" of genes and supported the idea that genes are complex functional units
I. Mutations in bacteriophages II. Mapping genes in bacteriophages III. Benzer and the rII locus IV. Deletion Mapping V. Complementation and Recombination analysis Assigned Readings and Problems: 3 rd Ed: Chapter 7, pg. 224-232 and problem 16-17, 18a, 19-23 4 th Ed: Chapter 7, pg. 216-224, problems 18-19, 20a, 21-25 Adapted from F.A. Laski and J. Ribaya I. Mutations in bacteriophages Spread E. coli cells on agar growth medium in a sterile petrie dish and grow at 37 C overnight. Phage Plaques -Eventually all of the bacteria in the vicinity of the original phage particle will be lysed yielding a clear spot (hole) in the lawn of bacteria, called a plaque. -Each overnight plaque contains ~1 x 10 8 bacteriophage. -Formation of lawn of bacteria on the surface of the medium. If you add a single bacteriophage (T4 or T2), it will infect one bacterium, lyse it, and release 300 progeny phage about 25 minutes laterinfecting neighboring bacteria (cycle repeats) Most phage phenotypes are visualized as plaques on lawns of bacteria Plaques can vary in morphology:
- Large or small plaques are determined by how fast lysis occurs - Host range is a reflection of what strains of bacteria the phage can bind to and lyse Observing Phage Wild type T4 phage produce small plaques with fuzzy margins, while rapid lysis (r) mutants produce large plaques with sharp margins. Rapid Lysis mutant (rapid lysis mutant) (wildtype) -When E.coli are infected with wild-type T4 (r + ), lysis is delayed for up to 2 hours--a process called lysis inhibition ! fuzzy margins of wild-type plaques.
-Lysis inhibition does not occur in bacteria infected with r mutants all cells infected with r mutants all lyse rapidly (sharp-dened edges). Usually bacteriophage infect a single strain of bacteria. -Some bacteriophage have acquired the ability to infect different host strainsthese phages are known as host range mutants (h). Host range mutants T2 wild-type and T2h mutants can be distinguished by growing them on a mixed lawn of E.coli R and E.coli S cells. E.coli S T2 E.coli R T2 X T2h T2h Host range mutants Mutant (h) virus ! clear plaques because they infect and lyse all host cells--whether E.coli S or E.coli R.
Wild-type (h + ) virus ! produce turbid plaques because they infect only S cells not the R cellsR cells are not lysed and can still grow in the region of the plaque. II. Mapping Genes in Bacteriophage Phage-phage Recombination Hershey experiment: -Two different phage genotypes can be recombined by simultaneously infecting host bacteria with two different types of phage and then screening progeny phage for recombinant genotypes. -Denes recombination frequency in phage.
Powerful experimental tool - one can measure very rare events Cross: h - r + x h + r -
E.coli S High multiplicity of infection (m.o.i.): High concentration of phage. Can Phage Genomes Recombine? Alfred Hershey and Max Delbrck, 1947: Traits: r + - small plaques r - - large plaques h + - infects E. coli S strain only h - - infects both E. coli S and R strain h- r+ h+ r- (S) Genetic Recombination in Phage Hershey simultaneously infected (at high m.o.i.) E.coli S cells with two different strains of bacteriophage T2. Because of the large amount of bacteriophage progeny that will result from this cross (10 10 phage / mL)one must first make serial dilutions of progeny phage before plating Genetic Recombination in Phage S S R R S Phage progeny: Four possible genotypes are produced by this recombination event:
Parental: h - r + and h + r - Recombinant: h + r + and h - r -
10 7 cells/ml E. coli S (permissive host: h - and h + phage can both infect) 10 8 h - r + phage 10 8 h + r - phage Use centrifugation to separate cells from progeny phage. Plate 100 L on mixture of E. coli S and R Serial Dilutions Use serial dilutions to dilute phage from 10 10 phage/ml to 10 3 phage/ml. 1mL 10 L 10 L 10 10 10 8 10 6 10 3 990 L 999 L 990 L 1 L When plated on a mixed lawn of E.coli R and E.coli S, each genotype produces a plaque with a distinct phenotype. Genetic Recombination in Phage Parental:
h - r + ! small clear plaques with fuzzy edges
h + r - ! large turbid plaques with sharp edges Recombinant:
h + r + ! small turbid plaques with fuzzy edges
h - r - ! large clear plaques with sharp edges What are the phenotypes of each genotype? genotypes h - r +
h + r -
h + r +
h - r - phenotypes # clear, small 42 cloudy, large 34 cloudy, small 12 clear, large 12 Results: Phage can Recombine Parental Recombinant Distance between h and r genes can be determined by calculating the recombination frequency between the two genes:
RF = (12 + 12) /100 = .24 or 24 mu Recombinant phage were observed: III. Benzer and the rII locus What is a gene? Approaches to a ne scale analysis of gene structure. A a b B X Old model of gene organization - Bead Theory
The gene is the fundamental unit of structure. Recombination takes place between but not within genes. The gene is the fundamental unit of change. One allele is converted to another at the whole gene level. Alleles are completely different from one another.
The gene is the fundamental unit of function. Genes only function as whole units, no partial function. Seymore Benzer and the rII genes of T4 phage A physicist in the 1940s -His experiments with semiconductors helped lead to the invention of the transistor.
In the 1950s he decided to dabble into the field of biology -His studies and discovery of the numerous mutations in the rII genes of the T4 phage lead to the understanding of the relationship between genes and proteins. Benzers Experiments Addressed Three Basic Questions: What is the basic element of structure? What is the basic element of change? What is the basic element of function? Why did Benzer choose to work on rII locus in T4 bacteriophage? 2. Easy to generate a lot of mutants with the bacteriophage system -can screen large number of phages (> 10 9 ) in short period of time (15 hours, overnight culture). 3. Easy assays -use selective agents to detect the presence of very small portion of recombinants within a large proportion of parentals (conditional mutant) 1. Mutants breed true What is a conditional mutant? Conditional mutations Mutations cause certain phenotype only in certain environment. Restrictive condition mutant phenotype (non-permissive)
Permissive condition wild type a. auxotrophs b. temperature sensitive c. host range ! Examples: rII (Rapid Lysis) Mutant Plaques rII (conditional lethal) affects lysis and host range of T4 phage:
rII + ! produces small plaques in both strains B and K
rII ! only grows on E. coli strain B (permissive host). ! cannot grow in E. coli strain K (non-permissive host). ! produces large plaques in strain B There are three rapid lysis mutations in T4 phage: rI, rII, rIII rII - rII + E.coli B E.coli B or K rII mutants grow on E. coli B but not on E. coli K -Note: rII can infect E. coli K but cannot lyse it. Large plaques Wild type plaques r +
r No growth Wild type plaques r +
Bacteria Strain Phage rII E. coli B E. coli K rII +
rII (Rapid Lysis) Mutant Plaques Recombination within a gene rare w.t. recombinants E.coli B E.coli B double mutant recombinant wild-type recombinant Whats an easier way to screen for wild-type recombinants? Very rare recombinants! double mutant recombinant wild-type recombinant Screening made easy! Mix of mutant and w.t. phage (total # of phage) w.t. phage only (1/2 # of total recombinants) Conclusion: Using conditional lethality is much easier than looking at plaque morphology. Benzer isolated thousands of rII mutants. rII-1 rII-2 E. coli B Benzer: Mapping his mutants
rII-a rII-b rII-g rII-c rII-d rII-e rII-f He constructed a fine-structure genetic map of the rII locus by crossing these mutants two-by-two to calculate map distance. rII-1 rII-2 E. coli B lysate B K titer 1. High MOI (multiplicity of infection) phage : bacteria
-To be sure that bacteria are infected by both mutants 2. Infect permissive E. coli strain B (recombination only occurs under permissive conditionBOTH bacteriophages must be able to replicate their genomes.) Procedure for calculating the distance between two mutants: Mapping rII mutations by 2-factor crosses 3. Plate lysate (after serial dilutions) on plates containing B and K. Before we start: How did Benzer isolate his thousands of rII mutants from a mixture of w.t., rI, rII, and rIII bacteriophages? Mapping rII mutations by 2-factor crosses Plaques on E. coli B Co-infect B cells with T4 phages carrying different rII mutations Phage will replicate their genomes. Recombination can occur... (within a gene) Plate progeny phage on plates with either E.coli B or K Mapping rII mutations by 2-factor crosses B B B Summary/Calculating R.f. Recombination freq. = 2 x (# wild type plaques on K) total phage (# of plaques on B) Serial dilution ! number of phages To calculate the total number of progeny phage produced per unit volume or the total number of wild-type recombinants per unit volumeyou will have to dilute the initial lysate before you plate on E.coli B or E.coli K, respectively. Calculating Total Phage Progeny For exampleif 250 plaques (on E.coli B) are counted in a sample diluted 10 6 -fold, then the original sample contained 2.5 x 10 8 phage per unit volume (250 x 10 6 ). -If 150 wild-type plaques (E.coli K) are present in a 10 4 dilution of the lysate, then the original sample contained 1.5 x 10 6 recombinant wild-type phage per unit volume (150 x 10 4 ). Recombination freq. = 2 x (# wild type plaques on K) total phage (# of plaques on B) The recombination frequency between the two mutant sites is 3 x 10 6 /2.5 x 10 8 = 0.012 or 1.2 mu X X X #1 + + + + + + + + + + + + #1 #1 #1 #2 #3 #2 #2 #2 #3 #3 #3 R.F. = 0.2% = 0.2 m.u. 1% = 1 m. u. 1.2% = 1.2 m.u. rII-2 rII-1 rII-3 0.2m.u. 1 m.u. Mapping using 2-Factor Crosses IV. Deletion Mapping Deletion mutations Initially he mapped 60 independent rII mutants using two factor crosses.
Most could spontaneously revert to wt at a frequency of 1/10 7
What type of mutations do you think these are? Some would never revert
What type of mutations do you think these are? Deletion mutations! Mutations rII- Point mutation: single nucleotide change m -Results in amino acid substitution or possibly a nonsense mutation. rII! Deletion mutation: one or more nucleotide missing -Removing coding DNA. -Can cause a frameshift mutation if the deletion is not in a multiple of 3. Deletion Mapping -To map all 2400 of his mutations via 2-factor crosses would have taken many years. Benzer isolated 2400 independent mutations within the rII locus -As a short-cut, Benzer used his deletion mutants to conduct deletion mapping. Recombination only occurs at homologous sequences Overlapping and Non-overlapping mutations If these mutations do not overlap, recombination can occur between a) two deletion mutations or b) between a point mutation and a deletion mutation Do the two rII mutations overlap??? Yes or No D1 D2 rII!1 rII - rII!2 rII - Wild type Double Mutant D2 D1 rII + rII - Non-overlapping mutations Take home message: If two rII mutations do not overlap, recombination can occur to produce wild-type phage. Plated on B ! # of total: (Deletion mutant 1 and 2 + wt + double mutant) Plated on K ! # of wt recombinants RF = #recombinants #total # K x 2 # B = 2 x wt total = D1 D3 If deletions do overlap No wt recombinants rII!1 rII - rII!3 rII - Is there any way you can make a wild type chromosome from these two mutant chromosomes? Take home message: A phage that carries a deletion cannot recombine with another phage that has a mutation in the region removed by the deletionneither has the w.t. nucleotide sequence in this region of the gene. Overlapping mutations Deletion Mapping Before he could use deletions in his short-cut mapping procedure, Benzer first had to: 1) Determine the sizes of the deleted regions relative 2) Determine their relative positions to one another along the rII locus.
He decided to cross the different rII deletions with each other (2- factor crosses): !1 !2 !3 !4 Cross w.t. recombinant? (growth on K) D1 D1 D1 D2 D2 D2 D3 D3 D4 D4 X X X X X yes no yes yes no Sizing up his deletions rII -
No plaques rII1 rII -
rII + plaques D1 rII!1 rII - rII2 rII - Plated on K Deletion Mapping He also characterized the deletions by crossing them to the 60 point mutations he previously mapped by standard two- and three- factor crosses. The Big Seven Seven large deletions that were missing overlapping segments of the rII locus were used to map each new point mutation to one of seven intervals of the locus. The Big Seven and more Benzer also characterized many smaller deletions that defined 47 intervals within the rII region. Benzer mapped 2400 rII mutations to 308 distinct sites by determining the RF between the mutations. Frequencies of rII + recombinants from crosses between two rII mutants Mapping of rII mutants The smallest recombination frequency observed was 0.02% ! 2.3 bp
-Suggested (later proved) that the basic unit of recombination is not the gene but the nucleotide. What is the basic unit of recombination? The rII mutants were not randomly distributed over the the 308 sites. Some rII sites were mutated more than other sites (hot spots). each tick mark represents a specific mutation mutlple marks at the same site means mutations are not separable by recombination distribution of mutations is not randomhot spots Fine Genetic Map of rII locus What is the basic unit of mutation? Mutation can occur at the nucleotide level; individual mutations can occur at the resolution of a single base pair. The distribution of mutations need not be random within the nucleotide sequence, some nucleotides may be more susceptible to mutation than others. (hot spots). V. Complementation and Recombination Analysis How many genes dene the rII locus? Benzer isolated many rII mutants and generated a genetic map. Do all these mutants belong to one gene? Do they all mutate the same polypeptide? -Test used to determine if mutations are in the same or in different genes. Method: complementation test Note: This experiment is not mapping the gene location Complementation analysis does NOT involve recombination between gene products
-It is testing for gene function. When do you normally conduct a complementation test? A B wt Example: Benzers T4 bacteriophageFunctional products from A and B genes are required for T4 phage to grow on E. coli K. Two mutations can complement each other if they provide different functions in the cell (are in different genes).
Mutations that failed to complement each other are in the same complementation group (same gene). Complementation Testing E. coli K A B wt A B mut1 A B mut3 A B mut2 wt mut1 mut3 mut2 growth no growth no growth no growth Complementation Testing A B mut1 E. coli K mut1 mut3 no growth no growth mut3 growth mut1 Conclusion: -mut1 and mut3 can complement each other. -mut1 and mut3 are in different genes and affect different gene products. A B mut3 Complementation Testing: Cond. lethal x Cond. lethal A B mut1 E. coli K mut1 mut2 no growth no growth mut2 no growth mut1 Conclusion: -mut1 and mut2 cannot complement each other. -mut1 and mut2 are in the same gene and affect the same gene product.
A B mut2 Complementation Testing Recombination v.s. Complementation Recombination: tests gene location. Complementation: tests gene function. gene A gene B rII-2 rII-1 rII-3 0.2 m.u. 1 m.u. R.F.= DO NOT CONFUSE COMPLEMENTATION WITH RECOMBINATION!!! Bacteria Strain Phage rII E. coli B E. coli K Large plaques No growth rII +
Wild type plaques Wild type plaques Recombination (between two different mutants of the same gene) only occurs under permissive conditions. E.coli B is a permissive host for rII mutants ! recombination E.coli K is a non-permissive host for rII mutants ! no recombination How do we know that the phage growing on E.coli K come from complementation rather than recombination? Recombination v.s. Complementation How do we distinguish complementation and recombination assays? Recombination: test gene location. Complementation: test gene function. Exchange genetic material Supplement gene products rII-1 rII-2 E. coli ? lysate E. coli Which bacteria host are you infecting at high m.o.i.? Recombination v.s. Complementation Recombination test You want to make sure that recombination occurs
1. Two mutants have to co-exist in the same bacteria 2. Because recombination only occurs during replication, you have to use the permissive strain, E. coli B. rII-1 rII-2 E. coli B lysate E. coli B E. coli K In this experiment, you want to ask if two mutants can provide each other with the required proteins.
-You do not want them to exchange genetic materials. Therefore, you have to use the non-permissive strain, E. coli K. Complementation test rII-1 rII-2 E. coli K lysate E. coli B Recombination Complementation Phage (rII) Permissive bacteria (E. coli B strain) Phage (rII) Non-permissive bacteria (E. coli K strain) liquid culture plate B B (plaque morphology) K test gene location test gene function Recombination v.s. Complementation Temporary Diploid The rII locus contains two genes The rII locus contains two genes These experiments allowed Benzer to group rII mutants, into two classes, A and B which form two separate clusters in the rII locus This showed that the rII locus is made up of two functionally independent genes.
The basic unit of function is the gene. The rII locus contains two genes: rIIA and B MUTANTS 1 2 3 4 5 6
Mutant 1 can complement all other mutants; it is a separate gene . Mutant 2 does not complement mutant 5; they are in the same gene. Mutants 3, 4 and 6 do not complement each other; they are in the same gene. 3 complementation groups3 separate genes Determining Complementation Groups COMPLEMENTATION RECOMBINATION 12 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 1 - - + + - 1 - - + + + 2 - - - - 2 - - - + 3 - - + 3 - + + 4 - + 4 - + 5 - 5 - 2 complementation groups: Group A: 1, 5 Group B: 3, 4 2, fails to complement with 1,5 (gene A) and 3, 4 (gene B) => large deletion 2 1 5 (3,4) Problem involving complementation and recombination Six Neurospora strains auxotrophic for proline were crossed to each other to determine complementation and linkage relationships. First growth of the heterokaryons on minimal media was recorded for each pair (Table 1). Then heterokaryons for each combination were grown on rich medium, and allowed to go through meiosis & sporulate. 1000 haploid spores from each cross were then germinated on minimal media. The # of spores that grew into colonies is shown in Table 2. Table 1 proA proB proC proD proE proF proA - + + + + + proB - + + - + proC - + + + proD - + - proE - + proF - Table 2 proA proB proC proD proE proF proA 0 250 100 50 250 50 proB 0 150 200 0 200 proC 0 50 150 50 proD 0 200 0 proE 0 200 proF 0 a) How many complementation groups are found in these mutants? Write the complementation groups and which alleles belong to each. b) Draw a map of the complementation groups with the map distances between adjacent genes. Problem involving complementation and recombination a) Four = (A), (B and E), (C), (D and F) b) A----10mu---D/F----10mu----C------------30mu----------B/E Summary of Benzers Discovery Identified the deletion as a mutation
Identified the point mutation (Defined mutation at the level of a nucleotide)
Developed deletion mapping
Proved linearity of a gene
Clarified the basis of complementation
Defined recombination at the level of the nucleotide
Phage Display A Practical Approach The Practical Approach Series 266 1st Edition Tim Clackson - Get instant access to the full ebook with detailed content
(Ebook) Bacteriophages. Biology and Applns by Elizabeth Kutter, Alexander Sulakvelidze ISBN 9780849313363, 0849313368 - Download the ebook today to explore every detail
Phage Display A Practical Approach The Practical Approach Series 266 1st Edition Tim Clackson - Get instant access to the full ebook with detailed content
(Ebook) Bacteriophages. Biology and Applns by Elizabeth Kutter, Alexander Sulakvelidze ISBN 9780849313363, 0849313368 - Download the ebook today to explore every detail