Luria & Delbrueck 1943, Mutations of bacteria from virus sensitivity to virus resistance

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Mutations of bacteria from virus sensitivity to virus resistance S. E. Luria and M. Delbrück Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, USA and Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA May 20, 1943 Genetics 28(6):491-511.

Transcript of Luria & Delbrueck 1943, Mutations of bacteria from virus sensitivity to virus resistance

Mutations of bacteriafrom virus sensitivityto virus resistance

S. E. Luria and M. Delbrück

Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, USA andVanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, USA

May 20, 1943

Genetics 28(6):491-511.

Table of contents

1. Timeline2. The big Question3. Materials4. Methods(i) Laboratory(ii) Mathematics5. Results6. Aftermath(s)7. Discussion

Timeline

– 1859: Charles Darwin– The Origin of Species

– 1866: Gregor Mendel– Inheritence of factors in pea plants

– 1902: Walter Sutton– Chromosome pairs, Mitosis and Meiosis

– 1910: Thomas Morgan– The 'gene' theory

Timeline cont.

– 1928: Fred Griffith– Transformation

– 1944: Avery, MacLeod and McCarty– Transformation linked to DNA

The knowledge at the time

– Known:

– Species change and evolve under pressure.

– Inheritance follows certain rules.

– Cells contain substances called Protein and DNA

– Hypothesized:

– Inheritance is linked to DNA?

– Species change independent of pressure?

– Species change due to pressure?

The Question:

Are mutations spontaneousor directed?

Materials

– A bacterium

– A virus

– Beaker & Petri dishes

– Pencil & Paper

Methods

Inoculate Add virus

Medium Sensitivebacteriagrow

Senstivebacteria

die

Resistantbacteriagrow

Two models

Model 1: Directed mutations (DM). Individuals are susceptible to change at times.

Model 2: Spontaneous mutations (SM). Individuals change randomly at times.

The idea

– The two different models may result in different statistical properties.

– This difference may be significant and measurable.

Implications of the DM model

Number of cells at time t:

Let be the probability that a given cell is currently susceptible to change.

The number of susceptible cells in generation T is binomially distributed.

Thus,

0

T

n t =2t

p

Z ~ B n t , p~ B 2T , p

E Z =2T p , V Z =2T p 1− p

Implications of the SM model

Mutations in generation t:

Cells in T that originate from mutation in t:

Mutated cells in T:

0

T

t

X t ~ B 2t , p

Y T t = 2T− t X t

Z t = ∑t=1

T

Y T t

Implications of the SM model cont.

Mutations in generation t:

Cells in T that originate from mutation in t:

Mutated cells in T:

X t ~ B 2t , p

Y T t = 2T− t X t

Z = ∑t=1

T

Y T t

E X = 2t pV X = 2t p 1− p

E Y = 2T−t E X = 2T pV Y = 22T−t V X

E Z = ∑t=1

T

E Y

= T 2T p

V Z = ∑t=1

T

V Y

= 22T1−12T p 1− p

Measurable property

– DM model – SM model

E Z =2T p

V Z =2T p 1−p

V Z E Z

= 1− p ≈ 1 V Z E Z

= 2T−11− p T

≫ 1

E Z = T 2T p

V Z = 22T1− 12T p 1− p

Experimental results

Figure: Histogram of the number of resistant bacteria, as observed in 87 parallel cultures (black bars), and corresponding distribution expected under directed mutation (white bars).

The aftermath(s)

– 1952: Hershey & Chase– Final proof that DNA is the genetic material.

– 1969: Delbrück, Hershey and Luria are awarded the Nobel prize in Medicine.

– Their method is used until today under the name 'fluctuation test'

Discussion

– What do we learn from this?

– Never underestimate the power and awesomeness of maths!

– Before throwing money and high-tech toys at a problem we may consider keeping it simple and use our brains.