Bacterial Chromosome - Naked & Circular
- Structure: Single, circular, double-stranded DNA molecule located in the cytoplasm.
- Location: Contained within the nucleoid, a non-membrane-bound region. This contrasts with the eukaryotic nucleus.
- Composition:
- Naked DNA: Lacks histones and a nuclear membrane, unlike eukaryotes.
- Associated with histone-like proteins for packaging and condensation.
- Ploidy: Haploid (one copy of the chromosome), meaning mutations have an immediate phenotypic effect.
- Supercoiling:
- The chromosome is highly folded and compacted into a supercoiled domain.
- Maintained by topoisomerase enzymes, such as DNA gyrase.
⭐ Exam Favorite: DNA gyrase (a type II topoisomerase) is the primary target for fluoroquinolone antibiotics (e.g., ciprofloxacin), which inhibit DNA replication by trapping the enzyme-DNA complex.

Plasmids - Resistance Rings
- Extrachromosomal, circular, double-stranded DNA molecules; replicate independently of the bacterial chromosome.
- Carry non-essential genes that often confer a survival advantage.
- Antibiotic Resistance: R-factors (resistance plasmids) are a primary source of multi-drug resistance (MDR).
- Toxin Production: e.g., Shiga-like toxin, heat-labile (LT) and heat-stable (ST) enterotoxins in E. coli.
- Pilus Formation: F-plasmids (fertility factors) enable genetic transfer via conjugation.

⭐ Plasmids are key vectors in genetic engineering (e.g., insulin production) and are the main drivers for the rapid horizontal spread of antibiotic resistance among bacterial populations.
Transposons - Mobile DNA Mayhem
- "Jumping genes": Segments of DNA that can move from one location in a genome to another (intramolecular) or between different DNA molecules (intermolecular), like from a plasmid to a chromosome.
- All transposons encode the enzyme transposase, which mediates their movement.
- Types:
- Insertion sequences (IS): Simplest form, containing only the transposase gene flanked by inverted repeats.
- Complex transposons: Carry additional genes, such as those for antibiotic resistance, flanked by two insertion sequences.

⭐ Vancomycin resistance in S. aureus (VRSA) is often acquired from Enterococcus faecalis (VRE) via conjugation involving transposon Tn1546, which carries the vanA gene cluster.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Bacterial genomes are typically a single, circular chromosome located in the nucleoid.
- They are haploid, meaning they have only one copy of each gene.
- Bacterial DNA lacks introns and histones; it is compacted by supercoiling via enzymes like DNA gyrase.
- Plasmids are small, circular, extrachromosomal DNA molecules that replicate independently.
- Plasmids often carry non-essential genes, such as those for antibiotic resistance or virulence factors.
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