Battling Resistance ■ 221
The same does not hold true for bacteria,
which are single cells and reproduce via asexual
reproduction. All genetic mutations in a bacterial
cell are passed on to the offspring. (See Chapter 6
for a review of cellular replication.) If a mutation
passed to an offspring increases the individual’s
ability to reproduce, that mutation is favored by
natural selection. These favored mutated genes
are passed from parent to offspring, spreading
through future generations in a way that alters
the population as a whole.
But bacteria don’t always wait for the right
random mutations to pop up in their genomes.
Sometimes they simply borrow new alleles from
other organisms. That appeared to be the case
with VRSA, researchers found. “In most cases,
VRSA has developed in a perfect storm,” says
Sievert. It emerges within “a very bad wound
that’s not healing and is a soup mix of organisms
coming together and sharing genes.”
Horizontal gene transfer is the process
by which bacteria pass genes to one another
(Figure 12.12). Bacteria store these genes on
small, circular pieces of DNA called plasmids.
Some bacteria send these plasmids to each other
through small tunnels, like dropping a package
down a trash chute.
Horizontal gene transfer is one example of
another mechanism by which evolution occurs:
gene flow. Gene flow is the exchange of alleles
between populations. Gene flow can occur
between two different species—in this case,
between a population of staph and a population
of Enterococcus—or between two populations
of the same species, such as strains of staph
passing methicillin resistance among them-
selves in the community. An individual that
migrates between two otherwise isolated popu-
lations of a species may facilitate gene flow as
well (Figure 12.13). Gene flow can also occur
when only gametes move from one population
to another, as happens when wind or pollinators
transport pollen from one population of plants
to another.
The introduction of new alleles via gene flow
can have dramatic effects. Two-way gene flow
consists of an exchange of alleles between one
population and another, so it tends to make
the genetic composition of different popula-
tions more similar. If one strain of staph shares
the methicillin-resistance allele with another
strain of staph, for example, the two populations
These bacteria are connected
by a conjugation tube and are in
the process of passing plasmid
DNA from one to another.
The donor bacterium
attaches to a recipient.
DNA is transferred to the
recipient through the tube.
The membranes of the two cells
fuse to form a conjugation tube.
Donor bacterium Recipient bacterium
Cytoplasm
Plasma
membrane
Cell wall
Chromosomal
Plasmid DNA DNA
Conjugation
tube
Figure 12.12
Horizontal gene transfer accelerates the rate of evolution
in prokaryotes
The diagram depicts the horizontal gene transfer of plasmid DNA through
conjugation, the physical process of transferring genetic material through
direct contact. In the case of VRSA, Staphylococcus aureus acquired
the vancomycin-resistance gene through horizontal gene transfer from
Enterococcus. M