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==Bacterial Genetics==
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==[[Bacterial Genetics]]==
===Replication of Bacteria===
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Bacteria  are haploid and have one circular chromosome of double stranded DNA.  Bacteria replicate through binary fission producing genetically  identical daughter cells. Each molecule of DNA in the daughter cells is  composed of a strand from the parent and a newly synthesised  complementary strand. This process of DNA replication is called  semiconservative replication.<br />
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===Plasmids===
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Plasmids  are small pieces of genetic material found in the cytoplasm and these  plasmids are able to replicate independantly of the bacterial  chromosome. Most species of bacteria contain plasmids that are composed  of double stranded DNA which are circular in shape. In pathogenic  bacteria it is often the plasmid that encodes virulence factors and  traits such as antibiotic resistance. <br />
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Replication of  most plasmids is not directly related to the replication of the host  bacterium and it has been found that the distribution of plasmids to  daughter cells is a random process as plasmids in the cytoplasm may or  may not be transferred when the cytoplasm of the cell is seperated prior  to forming the daughter cells. <br />
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Bacterial plasmids  can not only be transferred during bacterial replication but also via  processes called conjugation and transformation (although the  transformation process rarely occurs in nature).
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===Bacteriophages===
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A  bacteriophage is a term used to describe a virus that is able to infect  a bacterial cell and they can be either virulent or temperate depending  on their method of replication. Virulent bacteriophages undergo a lytic  cycle within the bacterium which eventually results in the production  of bacteriophage progeny from the cell and the lysis of the bacterium.  <br />
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A bacteriophage can be composed of either DNA or RNA  and iehter single or double stranded. The capsid (outer protective  layer) of the bacteriophage often remains outside the bacterial cell  after the viral nucleic material has entered the cell cytoplasm. The  host specificity of bacteriophages is related to the chemical affinity  between attachment structures on the surface of the bacteriophage capsid  and the receptors on the surface of the bacterium. <br />
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===Genetic Variation===
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Genetic  variation can occur in a number of ways and the genotype of the  bacteria determines its inheritable potential. Below are the main ways  that genetic mutation can occur in bacteria;
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'''Mutation'''
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A  mutation is a stable inheritable alteration in the bacterial genome.  This means that base pairs within a gene are altered. Genes with altered  base pairs may, or may not, depending on the mutation be functional or  can incorrectly code for an amino acid in a protein resulting in a  phenotypic change rather than simply a gene alteration. The type of  mutations occurring in bacteria are silent, non-sense, mis-sense, frame  shift, deletion of base pairs, insertions, translocations and  inversions.
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'''Genetic Recombination'''
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Genetic  recombination occurs when sequences of DNA from seperate sources become  integrated. This new genetic material can be introduced via  conjugation, transduction and transformation.
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''Conjugation''
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Conjugation  represents the process whereby DNA is transferred from a donor cell to a  recipient cell. The donor cell synthesises a modified "pilus" which the  donor cell inserts into the recipient cell. This is often called a sex  pilus. Genetic material is then transferred through the pilus to the  recipient. During conjugation, plasmid genetic material is mostly  transferred, although chromosomal DNA can also be transferred via this  process. Conjugation is most frequently associated with gram negative  bacteria, but can occur in some gram positive bacteria. A sex pilus is  not formed in gram positive bacteria and instead plasmid DNA is  transferred when the bacteria are in close physical contact.
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''Tranduction''
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During  transduction, DNA from a donor bacterium is incorporated into the  nucleic acid of a bacteriophage and it is the progeny of the  bacteriophage infecting another bacterium that allows the transfer of  the genetic material.
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''Transformation''
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The  process of transformation involves the transfer of genes from a segment  of chromosomal DNA from a lysed donor bacterium to a fully functional  recipient. Natural transformation is uncommon and is usually restricted  to propcedures carried out in the lab.
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[[Category:Bacteria - Overview]]
       
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