Sexual reproduction in bacteria involves plasmids, which are loops of DNA that can multiply and move between bacterial cells and insert into or take DNA from the nucleus. This allows for genetic recombination between bacteria through three main processes: conjugation, where bacteria connect and transfer genes through a protein tube; transformation, where bacteria take in extracellular DNA from the environment; and transduction, where viruses called bacteriophages exchange DNA between bacteria during infection. These sexual reproduction processes generate genetic diversity unlike binary fission.
3. single DNA molecule replicates and both
copies attach to the cell membrane.
The cell membrane begins to grow
between the two DNA molecules
4. the cell membrane begins to pinch
inward;
cell wall then forms between the
two DNA molecules dividing the
original cell into two
identical daughter cell
6. SEXUAL REPRODUCTION
Sex in bacteria differs somewhat from what we consider
sex in eukaryotes. It involves the PLASMID, which has
several important characteristics:
A plasmid is a loop of DNA. Plasmids can multiply
autonomously within the cell. Thus we may find from zero to
many of one or more plasmids in each cell.
7. SEXUAL REPRODUCTION
Many plasmids can insert into the DNA of the nucleus, and
detach from it. In doing so, the plasmid may leave part of
the plasmid DNA behind, and take some of the nuclear
DNA with it.
10. CONJUGATION
one bacterium connects itself to another
through a protein tube structure called a
PILUS. Genes are transferred from one
bacterium to the other through this tube.
11. TRANSFORMATION
the bacterium binds the DNA and transports it
across the bacterial cell membrane. The new
DNA is then incorporated into the bacterial
cell's DNA.