Utilisateur
Recombination is the process where two DNA molecules are broken at the same position and then rejoined in new combinations, resulting in an exchange of genetic material between the molecules.
🧠 Tip: “Break and rejoin — mix the code, not just copy it.”
To promote evolution and genetic diversity by creating new gene combinations and enabling DNA repair and genome rearrangements.
🧠 Tip: “Recombination = innovation + repair.”
Changes gene order through deletions or inversions.
Moves genes to different replicons (chromosome ↔ plasmid ↔ phage DNA).
🧠 Tip: “Recombination reshuffles — inside and between genomes.”
Conjugation: recombination between an Hfr donor and F⁻ recipient.
Transduction: integration after generalized or specialized phage transfer.
Plasmid integration: plasmid DNA recombines into the chromosome (Hfr formation).
Phage integration: phage DNA integrates into the host chromosome (lysogeny).
🧠 Tip: “Conjugation, transduction, integration — three highways of recombination.”
Facilitation of DNA replication, especially for DNA repair and restart of collapsed replication forks.
🧠 Tip: “Recombination rescues replication.”
Bacteria have only one origin of replication (ori) per chromosome.
A nick or break in the template strand can halt replication.
Homologous recombination provides a mechanism to repair or restart these collapsed forks — a key evolutionary advantage.
🧠 Tip: “One ori, one shot — recombination saves the fork.”
Site-specific recombination
Rare
Occurs between short, defined DNA sequences
Requires specialized recombination proteins (e.g., phage integrase, transposase)
Homologous recombination
Common
Occurs between long, similar DNA regions (~20–500 bp)
Uses host recombination machinery (e.g., RecA, RecBCD, RecF)
🧠 Tip: “Site-specific = precise; Homologous = flexible.”
Both involve DNA breakage and rejoining, leading to crossovers or integration events in the genome.
🧠 Tip: “Different routes, same result — DNA exchange.”
Hershey and Rotman (1940) coinfected E. coli with two T2 phages — r⁻h⁺ and r⁺h⁻ — each at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) = 5.
They observed 2% recombinant progeny (r⁻h⁻ and r⁺h⁺), proving phage recombination occurs.
🧠 Tip: “Hershey & Rotman mixed phages, saw recombination miracles.”
Recombinant genotypes (r⁻h⁻, r⁺h⁺) arose from genetic recombination, not mutation.
Phages could therefore be used as powerful models for genetic analysis.
🧠 Tip: “Phages recombine like chromosomes — perfect genetic tools.”
Copy choice model: recombinants form during DNA replication, where the polymerase switches templates between parental strands.
Breakage and reunion model: recombinants form by physical breakage and rejoining of parental DNA molecules.
🧠 Tip: “Copy = template switch; Break = DNA stitch.”
The breakage and reunion model, since recombination is now known to occur through DNA strand breakage, exchange, and rejoining — mechanisms later described by the Holliday model.
🧠 Tip: “Recombination isn’t copy-paste — it’s cut and rejoin.”
They tested the breakage and reunion model of recombination using bacteriophage λ.
🧠 Tip: “M&W proved it’s break-and-rejoin, not copy-and-slide.”
Phage DNA grown in N¹⁵ medium → heavy DNA.
Phage DNA grown in N¹⁴ medium → light DNA.
They then coinfected E. coli with heavy (A⁺R⁻) and light (A⁻R⁺) phages to track mixing in progeny using density gradient centrifugation.
The recombinant progeny had intermediate densities (ranging from heavy to light), showing that each recombinant phage contained DNA from both parents.
🧠 Tip: “Mixed DNA density = physical DNA exchange.”
If recombination occurred by copy-choice (template switching), all recombinant DNA would have been uniformly light (since replication occurred in N¹⁴ medium).
The observed range of densities proved that parental DNA physically broke and rejoined, supporting the breakage–reunion model.
🧠 Tip: “Different densities = real DNA breakage.”
High sequence similarity (≈95%) between recombining DNA regions.
Complementary base pairing between strands of the two DNA molecules.
Involvement of many gene products (e.g., RecA, RecBCD, RecF, Ruv, RecG).
🧠 Tip: “Homology, pairing, proteins — the recombination trio.”
Ensures that recombination occurs only between nearly identical DNA regions, preventing loss or mismatch of genetic information.
Typical requirement: ≥95% sequence identity across the crossover region.
🧠 Tip: “High homology = safe exchange.”
A synapse is the point where two DNA molecules are paired via complementary base pairing between their strands.
Formation requires a mechanism that allows strand pairing between double helices without fully separating them.
RecA protein later facilitates this process.
🧠 Tip: “Synapse = site where DNAs shake hands.”
Recombination requires enzymes that break and rejoin DNA strands, including:
Nucleases → create nicks or breaks in DNA strands.
Ligases → seal new joins between different DNA molecules.
These allow physical strand exchange, similar to replicative transposition.
🧠 Tip: “Cut with nucleases, glue with ligase.”
A heteroduplex is a region within the synapse where base pairing occurs between complementary strands from two different DNA molecules.
All four DNA strands are involved.
Forms after strand invasion and alignment of homologous sequences.
🧠 Tip: “Hetero = mixed; duplex = paired.”
It stabilizes the synapse by allowing hybrid pairing between homologous DNA strands, enabling exchange of genetic information and eventual formation of crossovers.
All models include:
DNA breakage and rejoining steps,
Heteroduplex formation,
Enzymatic processing by nucleases and ligases, and
Resolution of crossover structures.
Different pathways (e.g., RecBCD, RecF) follow these shared steps.
Proposed by Robin Holliday (1964), the model describes homologous recombination via reciprocal strand invasion:
Two single-strand breaks occur at identical positions in both DNA molecules.
Free ends cross over and base pair with complementary strands of the other DNA.
Ligation forms a cross-shaped (cruciform) structure called the Holliday junction.
🧠 Tip: “Break, cross, join — Holliday’s recombination coin.”
It can isomerize between two structural conformations.
When cut and religated (resolved), the outcome depends on the orientation of the resolution cut:
One orientation → recombinant (crossover) molecules.
The other → nonrecombinant (patch) molecules.
🧠 Tip: “How you cut decides who swaps.”
Branch migration is the movement of the Holliday junction (the crossover point) along the DNA duplex, extending or shifting the region of heteroduplex DNA.
🧠 Tip: “The crossover travels — junction on the move.”
Requires specialized proteins that break and reform hydrogen bonds rapidly between the base pairs.
This allows the junction to move up or down the DNA without dissociating the duplex.
Expands the heteroduplex region.
🧠 Tip: “Proteins push the branch; DNA keeps swapping partners.”
No — there is no precise mechanism ensuring identical strand cutting positions in both DNA molecules.
This lack of precision can lead to mismatched bases or gene conversion within heteroduplex regions.
Proposed by Meselson and Radding, this model describes recombination starting with a single-strand nick in one DNA molecule (not both).
The exposed single strand then invades another double-stranded DNA at a homologous site, initiating strand exchange.
🧠 Tip: “One strand breaks, one strand invades.”
One DNA molecule experiences a random single-strand cut.
The free strand invades another double-stranded DNA, displacing one strand.
DNA polymerase fills in the gap left by the invading strand.
The displaced strand is degraded.
The new end is ligated, forming a Holliday junction.
The junction undergoes isomerization and resolution.
Initially, the heteroduplex forms in only one DNA molecule.
Branch migration later extends it into the second molecule, producing the symmetrical structure seen in the Holliday model.
🧠 Tip: “Starts one-sided, migrates two-sided.”
Recombination initiated by a double-strand break (DSB) in one DNA molecule.
Both strands are broken, and recombination repairs the break by using a homologous DNA molecule as a template.
🧠 Tip: “Two strands broken, one partner borrowed.”
Both DNA strands broken.
5′ ends degraded by exonuclease → create 3′ single-stranded tails.
One 3′ tail invades a homologous DNA duplex and pairs with complementary bases.
DNA polymerase extends the invading strand.
The displaced strand is used as a template to repair the second gap.
DNA ligase seals nicks → two Holliday junctions form.
🧠 Tip: “Cut, chew, invade, extend, seal — DSBR heals.”
Formation of two Holliday junctions, which can be resolved to produce either recombinant (crossover) or nonrecombinant (patch) DNA molecules, depending on cut orientation.
Double-strand breaks were thought to be lethal, but experiments showed they can stimulate homologous recombination and DNA repair, proving that DSBs can be repair intermediates, not dead ends.
🧠 Tip: “What kills can also heal — DSBs start recombination.”
Recombination is essential to restart collapsed replication forks and initiate replication under DNA damage conditions — a process called Stable DNA Replication (SDR).
A form of replication initiation that occurs without new protein synthesis, triggered by DNA damage and double-strand breaks.
Does not require standard oriC initiation.
Uses recombination proteins to reload the replication machinery at DSBs.
Pri proteins and DnaT help reload DnaB helicase via DnaC.
This mechanism allows replication to restart at DSBs, linking recombination to DNA replication restart.
🧠 Tip: “Pri + DnaT reload the fork when replication collapses.”
To facilitate DNA replication and repair, especially to restart collapsed replication forks.
Since bacterial chromosomes have only one origin of replication (oriC), a single nick or break can be fatal unless repaired by homologous recombination.
🧠 Tip: “One ori, one lifeline — recombination restarts the fork.”
Recombination proceeds through three coordinated steps:
DNA end processing → formation of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) ends by RecBCD or RecQJ/RecFOR.
Synapsis formation → RecA binds ssDNA, promoting alignment and strand exchange with a homologous duplex to form a Holliday junction.
Resolution → RuvABC or RecG proteins resolve the Holliday junction to yield recombinant molecules.
🧠 Tip: “RecBCD cuts, RecA pairs, RuvABC repairs.”
Chi (χ) sites are short DNA sequence motifs (5′-GCTGGTGG-3′ in E. coli) that regulate RecBCD activity during recombination.
When RecBCD encounters a χ site, it reduces its nuclease activity and begins producing a 3′ single-stranded tail for RecA loading.
🧠 Tip: “χ = crossover hotspot; RecBCD shifts from destroyer to helper.”
RecBCD is a helicase–nuclease complex that processes double-strand DNA ends.
It unwinds and degrades DNA until it reaches a χ site, then creates a 3′ ssDNA tail and loads RecA onto it to initiate recombination.
🧠 Tip: “RecBCD: chew, find χ, and hand DNA to RecA.”
RuvA and RuvB mediate branch migration.
RuvC introduces targeted cuts to resolve the junction.
RecG can also promote junction migration and resolution in an alternate pathway.
🧠 Tip: “RuvABC resolves; RecG backs up.”
Generation of ssDNA ends → by RecBCD (from DSBs) or RecQJ/RecFOR (from gaps).
Synapse formation → RecA coats ssDNA and aligns it with a homologous duplex to form a Holliday junction.
Resolution → RuvABC or RecG proteins catalyze branch migration and resolution of the junction.
🧠 Tip: “RecBCD cuts, RecA pairs, Ruv/RecG repairs.”
χ (chi) sites are recombination hotspots (sequence: 5′-GCTGGTGG-3′).
When RecBCD encounters a χ site, it switches from DNA degradation to ssDNA generation and RecA loading, promoting homologous pairing.
🧠 Tip: “χ = signal to switch from chew to glue.”
RecBCD → processes DNA ends and loads RecA.
RecA → forms nucleoprotein filament, promotes strand invasion.
RuvA/B → catalyze branch migration.
RuvC/RecG → resolve Holliday junctions.
RecFOR/RecQJ → repair ssDNA gaps when RecBCD is not involved.
🧠 Tip: “RecBCD starts, RecA invades, Ruv/RecG finish.”
Because recombination is vital for DNA repair, genetic exchange, and replication restart, E. coli maintains multiple pathways and backup enzymes to ensure recombination can occur under various stress or damage conditions.
🧠 Tip: “One pathway fails? E. coli has backups to survive.”
RecBCD is a multi-enzyme complex that initiates homologous recombination by processing double-stranded DNA ends.
It unwinds DNA, degrades one strand, and produces a 3′ single-stranded tail for RecA loading at a χ site.
🧠 Tip: “RecBCD: unwind, chew, and hand off to RecA.”
RecBCD has:
ssDNA endonuclease activity → cuts single strands internally.
ssDNA exonuclease activity → digests DNA from free ends.
DNA helicase activity (two motors of opposite polarity).
DNA-dependent ATPase activity → powers unwinding and degradation.
🧠 Tip: “RecBCD = cut, chew, unwind, and fuel.”
It processes broken DNA ends to initiate strand invasion by RecA and to restart replication after fork collapse — linking DNA repair, recombination, and replication restart.
Without RecBCD, E. coli is highly sensitive to DNA damage.
🧠 Tip: “No RecBCD, no repair.
RecD is inactivated, halting excessive nuclease activity.
The complex shifts from DNA degradation to RecA loading on the new 3′ ssDNA tail.
🧠 Tip: “χ = switch signal — stop chewing, start recombining.”
RecBC promotes cooperative binding of RecA to the exposed 3′ ssDNA, forming a RecA–DNA filament capable of searching for homologous sequences and initiating strand invasion.
🧠 Tip: “RecBC hands DNA to RecA for pairing.”
Because Single-Stranded Binding (SSB) proteins bind ssDNA more strongly than RecA, random RecA binding could block normal replication or repair.
By loading RecA only after χ site recognition, RecBCD ensures that RecA binds exclusively at true recombination sites.
🧠 Tip: “RecBCD controls the gate—RecA loads only where it’s safe.”
RecA polymerizes cooperatively on the 3′ ssDNA to form a helical nucleoprotein filament, the active substrate for homologous pairing and strand exchange.
This marks the commitment step of homologous recombination.
🧠 Tip: “RecA filament = green light for recombination.”
The χ site sequence is 5′–GCTGGTGG–3′, recognized by the RecC subunit of the RecBCD complex.
🧠 Tip: “C sees χ — C for chi recognition.”
RecC interacts with the χ sequence and inhibits RecD, halting its strong helicase/nuclease activity.
RecD inhibition in turn reduces RecB’s 3′→5′ exonuclease activity, preventing further degradation of the DNA strand containing χ.
🧠 Tip: “C spots χ → shuts D down → saves the 3′ end.”
RecD (fast helicase) is inhibited.
RecB’s endonuclease is stimulated to cut the opposite (non-χ) strand across from the χ site.
RecB’s 5′→3′ exonuclease then degrades the non-χ strand, producing a 3′ ssDNA tail on the χ strand.
🧠 Tip: “After χ: D stops, B chops.”
Once the χ strand is exposed, RecB coats the 3′ ssDNA tail with RecA, forming a RecA–ssDNA filament that can invade homologous DNA and initiate recombination.
🧠 Tip: “RecB hands the baton to RecA at χ.”
recD⁻ mutants are viable, cannot degrade transformed linear DNA, but are still proficient for recombination.
This shows that χ sites are not strictly required for recombination—rather, they regulate RecBCD’s DNA-degrading activity.
🧠 Tip: “Lose RecD → less chew, still recombine.”
χ sites act as a defense mechanism — they provide “immunity” against foreign DNA.
χ sites are highly overrepresented in the E. coli genome (~1 per 4.5 kb, vs. 1 per 65 kb by chance).
DNA without χ sites (like foreign DNA or phage DNA) is more likely to be degraded by RecBCD.
🧠 Tip: “χ marks friend, not foe.”
Phages protect their DNA by:
Shielding double-stranded ends, or
Producing proteins that inhibit RecBCD, such as the λ Gam protein.
🧠 Tip: “Gam jams RecBCD.”
Yes — many bacteria and archaea have χ-like sequences that interact with RecBCD-like enzymes.
These sequences differ between species but perform the same regulatory role in recombination and DNA protection.
🧠 Tip: “Different χ, same job — regulate recombination across life.”
χ sites also control the direction of DNA replication following a double-strand break (DSB).
They ensure that any replication forks restarted by RecBCD proceed in the same direction as normal replication from oriC.
🧠 Tip: “χ keeps forks flowing forward.”
χ sites are polar—they only function when RecBCD approaches in the correct direction.
This ensures RecBCD produces a 3′ single-stranded tail on the correct DNA end for RecA loading and replication restart.
🧠 Tip: “Right way = recombine; wrong way = ignore.”
They are enriched in one orientation, biased so that RecBCD-mediated replication restart occurs co-directionally with replication from oriC.
This prevents head-on collisions between restarted and ongoing replication forks.
🧠 Tip: “Genome χ-biased — forks stay aligned.”
The RecF pathway is an alternate recombination route that generates single-stranded DNA ends for homologous recombination without RecBCD.
It acts mainly on gaps in DNA (not DSBs), using proteins like RecQ, RecJ, RecF, RecO, and RecR.
🧠 Tip: “RecF fixes gaps when RecBCD isn’t needed.”
The RecF pathway initiates homologous recombination at single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) gaps created during:
DNA repair, or
Replication fork passage over a lesion in the lagging strand.
🧠 Tip: “RecF repairs gaps where replication stumbles.”
It helps restart replication at stalled forks and ensures DNA repair continuity when the normal RecBCD double-strand break pathway isn’t available.
🧠 Tip: “When RecBCD rests, RecF revives the fork.”
RecQ → a helicase that unwinds DNA near the gap.
RecJ → a 5′→3′ exonuclease that enlarges the gap to create ssDNA.
RecFOR complex → loads RecA onto the exposed ssDNA.
🧠 Tip: “Q unwinds, J chews, FOR loads RecA.”
RecA binds ssDNA to form a helical nucleoprotein filament, the active structure for homologous pairing and strand invasion into duplex DNA.
🧠 Tip: “RecA filament = engine of recombination.”
The RecA–ssDNA filament scans duplex DNA for complementary sequences, aligning them precisely to catalyze strand exchange and form a Holliday junction.
Extremely efficient — ~100% of incoming ssDNA that encounters a complementary region in the cell recombines successfully, reflecting RecA’s strong pairing and catalytic activity.
🧠 Tip: “If it fits, it recombines — RecA almost never misses.”
RecA-coated ssDNA scans duplex DNA along the major groove, testing for base-pair complementarity without disrupting the double helix.
🧠 Tip: “RecA reads the helix like Braille — through the groove.”
The filament triggers displacement of one DNA strand, forming a D-loop (displacement loop) where the invading ssDNA pairs with its homologous strand.
🧠 Tip: “D-loop = Displaced strand loop — invasion confirmed.
A triple-stranded structure forms temporarily, consisting of:
The invading ssDNA,
The paired complementary strand, and
The displaced original strand.
This is a critical intermediate in forming a Holliday junction.
Because RecA can align ssDNA and dsDNA to the exact base-pair level and initiate pairing without fully unwinding the duplex, preventing nonspecific recombination.
🧠 Tip: “RecA matches bases with surgical precision.”
Trans-activation refers to the ability of a RecA–ssDNA filament to activate a non-complementary dsDNA molecule, allowing it to become temporarily open and receptive to invasion by another complementary strand.
🧠 Tip: “RecA primes one helix so another can invade.”
The activated duplex may become transiently extended with partially separated strands, making room for the invading ssDNA to pair — a process still not fully understood mechanistically.
🧠 Tip: “RecA stretches the helix just enough for entry.”
After strand invasion, RecA can extend its nucleoprotein filament into neighboring dsDNA, effectively spooling the DNA through the filament.
This helps stabilize the invading strand and promote further pairing.
🧠 Tip: “RecA reels DNA in like thread on a spool.”
Junctions form where the invading ssDNA pairs with one strand of a dsDNA molecule — these are Holliday junction precursors, enabling crossover and branch migration.
🧠 Tip: “Invasion creates the crossover gateway.”
Branch migration is the movement of the crossover point along the DNA duplex, extending or shifting the region of hybrid pairing (heteroduplex DNA).
It is catalyzed by specialized enzymes like RuvA, RuvB, and RecG.
🧠 Tip: “The branch walks — the heteroduplex grows.”
Regions of DNA where complementary strands come from two different parental molecules and are base-paired together after branch migration.
🧠 Tip: “Hetero = mixed origin; duplex = double-stranded.”
They represent the actual region of genetic exchange — mismatches here can lead to gene conversion or genetic variation after mismatch repair.
🧠 Tip: “Where hybrid pairing happens, new alleles are born.”
After strand invasion, RecA can extend its nucleoprotein filament into neighboring dsDNA, effectively spooling the DNA through the filament.
This helps stabilize the invading strand and promote further pairing.
🧠 Tip: “RecA reels DNA in like thread on a spool.”
Junctions form where the invading ssDNA pairs with one strand of a dsDNA molecule — these are Holliday junction precursors, enabling crossover and branch migration.
🧠 Tip: “Invasion creates the crossover gateway.”
Flashcard 3
Branch migration is the movement of the crossover point along the DNA duplex, extending or shifting the region of hybrid pairing (heteroduplex DNA).
It is catalyzed by specialized enzymes like RuvA, RuvB, and RecG.
🧠 Tip: “The branch walks — the heteroduplex grows.”
Regions of DNA where complementary strands come from two different parental molecules and are base-paired together after branch migration.
🧠 Tip: “Hetero = mixed origin; duplex = double-stranded.”
They represent the actual region of genetic exchange — mismatches here can lead to gene conversion or genetic variation after mismatch repair.
🧠 Tip: “Where hybrid pairing happens, new alleles are born.”
Isomerization is a rearrangement of the four DNA strands within a Holliday junction that changes their crossover configuration.
It occurs rapidly, requires no energy, and does not break hydrogen bonds.
🧠 Tip: “The junction flips form without breaking bonds.”
The orientation of the junction at the moment of resolution determines whether the products are recombinant (crossover) or nonrecombinant (patch).
🧠 Tip: “How you cut decides who swaps.”
RuvA is a flower-shaped tetramer that binds Holliday junction DNA in a flat, square configuration.
It positions the four DNA arms for branch migration and cleavage.
🧠 Tip: “RuvA = anchor — holds the cross steady.”
RuvB forms hexameric rings around opposite DNA arms.
It uses ATP hydrolysis to pump DNA through the junction, driving branch migration.
🧠 Tip: “RuvB = motor — moves the cross along.”
RuvC acts as an endonuclease (resolvase) that cuts the Holliday junction at specific sequences (5′–(A/T)TT(G/C)–3′).
This resolves the junction into separate recombinant DNA molecules.
🧠 Tip: “RuvC = cutter — finishes the exchange.”
They form the RuvABC complex:
RuvA binds and aligns the junction.
RuvB powers DNA movement.
RuvC resolves the junction by cutting.
Together they complete homologous recombination.
🧠 Tip: “A holds, B moves, C cuts — teamwork at the junction.”
RecG can move Holliday junctions but cannot resolve them.
It can also bind three-stranded junctions, helping to reverse stalled replication forks at sites of DNA damage.
Pri proteins can then reload DnaB helicase to restart replication.
🧠 Tip: “RecG = the backup motor that saves stalled forks.”
In E. coli, recombination usually occurs between a small linear DNA fragment and the bacterial chromosome, not between two large homologous chromosomes.
However, the enzymes and core mechanisms (RecA, RecBCD, Holliday junctions, etc.) are very similar to those in eukaryotes.
🧠 Tip: “Different scale, same machinery.”
They typically arise from:
Replication restart after fork collapse,
DNA damage, or
Incoming DNA (e.g., phage infection or transformation).
🧠 Tip: “Broken forks feed the recombination system.”
It occurs during DNA replication, when homologous sequences are most accessible for strand invasion and pairing.
🧠 Tip: “Recombination piggybacks on replication.”
RecBCD processes the linear DNA end, producing a 3′ ssDNA tail at a χ site.
RecA coats the ssDNA and mediates strand invasion into the homologous chromosomal region.
Replication initiates from the invading DNA fragment.
Replication forks continue until reaching the terminus or a fork from oriC.
🧠 Tip: “Process → invade → replicate → merge.”
After replication and segregation, each daughter cell can inherit different alleles if sequence differences existed between the incoming DNA and the original chromosome.
This produces genetic diversity in the bacterial population.
🧠 Tip: “Recombination = allele shuffle for evolution.”
