They ensure the PCR fragment recombines precisely at the intended genomic location via homologous recombination.
From the template plasmid used in PCR (e.g., pKD3, pKD4). It is NOT from the bacterial genome.
Linear DNA signals phage infection → E. coli uses RecBCD to rapidly destroy it.
Blocks RecBCD so the linear PCR DNA isn’t degraded.
Exo chews back 5′ ends → creates 3′ ssDNA overhangs required for Beta to anneal to the chromosome.
Binds the 3′ ssDNA overhangs → promotes strand invasion and annealing during recombination.
It induces pKD20 to express λ Red proteins so that the PCR fragment can recombine immediately after entering the cell. Without induction → no recombination → fragment degraded
After induction stops:
Lambda Red proteins decay
RecBCD becomes active again
Leftover linear DNA is destroyed
It cannot replicate → cannot form colonies
It acts as a temporary selectable marker so we can identify cells where recombination succeeded.
To:
Allow reuse of the same antibiotic marker
Prevent unwanted polar effects
Keep the genome clean
Enable future plasmid transformations without confusion
They are recognized by FLP recombinase which excises the AbR cassette during the flip-out step.
A single FRT scar (~80 bp).
Two ways:
Phenotypic: Patch onto LB vs LB+Ab → Ab-sensitive = AbR cassette gone
Genotypic: PCR → flip-out strain gives smaller band than WT
WT still contains the full gene → longer PCR product → slower migration → higher on gel.
Δgene only has a small FRT scar → smaller fragment → lower on gel.
pKD20 is a helper plasmid expressing Exo/Beta/Gamma.
It never integrates — it stays separate and is later cured.
Linear DNA cannot enter efficiently via heat shock.
Electroporation creates pores allowing it to enter.
Because:
After induction ends, Gamma disappears
RecBCD degrades all linear DNA
Only recombined fragments (inside the chromosome) survive
Recombination efficiency drops dramatically or fails completely.
PCR fragment is degraded before recombination can occur → no colonies.
Because λ Red proteins (Exo, Beta, Gamma) are essential for recombination and E. coli does not express them naturally.
A DNA segment in toxigenic V. cholerae that includes ctxAB (cholera toxin genes) plus recombination sites (RS/att) used for integration/excision.
By replacing ctxAB with a KanR cassette, so any strain that receives CTX-Km becomes kanamycin resistant (Kmᴿ).
The liquid above the pellet after centrifugation/filtration that contains secreted molecules & phages but no cells.
Transfer still occurs when donor cells are removed and only the cell-free supernatant is used, so there is no cell-to-cell contact. Conjugation needs direct contact.
DNase I treatment (which destroys naked DNA) does not block transfer. So the transferred material is not free DNA(not transformation).
Heat/chloroform destroy phage particles, and under these treatments transfer stops. This indicates transfer is via a phage (CTXφ).
The double-stranded DNA form of the phage genome inside the host, called pCTX-Km when it carries the KanR replacement.
To produce pure CTXφ particles in a host with no prophages and no TCP, so phage can be made but not re-infect the same cells. This gives a clean phage prep for EM and further experiments.
It’s a filamentous phage, like M13 – long, thin, flexible filaments.
It causes DNA damage, triggering prophage induction. CTXφ excises from the chromosome, forms phage particles, and can then infect new cells.
Supernatant from SM44 grown with mitomycin C contains more KmR-transducing particles which can convert O395 to Kmᴿ.
Tiny 4 bp insertion/deletion causes a frameshift → nonfunctional protein, but doesn’t delete the gene or its regulation completely. Good way to test if the proteins are needed.
Mutated pCTX-Km plasmids no longer produced KmR phage particles, so zot and orfU are required for phage particle morphogenesis.
TCP (toxin co-regulated pilus). Only TCP+ strains become Kmᴿ when exposed to CTX-Kmφ. TCP mutants are resistant.
CTXφ cannot bind or infect it → no transductants (no Kmᴿ colonies).
O395 (classical) expresses TCP well both in vitro and in vivo, so CTXφ can infect it in lab media and in the mouse intestine.
Bah-2 (El Tor) expresses TCP mainly inside the host (in vivo), not well in vitro. So CTXφ could infect it in mice, but not efficiently in regular lab broth.
When CTXφ integrates into a previously non-toxigenic V. cholerae strain, giving it cholera toxin genes and turning it into a pathogen.
Extra genes in a prophage genome (like ctxAB) that are not needed for the phage’s own life cycle, but provide advantages to the host, like virulence factors. (“More-on” the genome than necessary.)
Because it can move toxin genes between strains, leading to new toxigenic V. cholerae variants and possibly new pandemics.
