A tradition of Plasmid Biology Conferences that seems to have lapsed in recent years was reciting or singing or performing plasmid-related poems or songs at the conference dinner. These were often composed at the meeting to highlight memorable presentations. The first we have is copied below and others will be added as soon as possible.
Genetic Kapers (Stewart Levy, Don Clewell, Karin Ippen-Ihler and others)
1978, Berlin
When plasmids came into this world
Who’d have known that they would be
A problem for the doctors
And a research grant for me
We see them keep on growing
World widely they abound
Collecting genes like garbage
And passing them around.
When I was just a little gene
Upon the chromosome
A plasmid sat down next to me,
Said: “Don’t be a stay at home.
Excise with me, I have the stuff
My tra genes are intact
The time has come for you to learn
About the mating act.”
I am a lonely pilus
On the surface of the cell
I have a reputation
As a sexy organelle
It’s my good luck I’m not Fin+
I’m always out to play
When I attach, oh what a match
I have a holiday.
I am a special entity
Oh happy, happy me
My life is full of fun and games
And promiscuity
Who else can flit so easily
From one mate to the next
No care about the species
And even less the sex.
I’m still transposon number 10
Though I can’t name my ends
I think I’ll have to sequence them
Before I make amends
Were they once IS3? Oh well,
Until just recently
I guess that for the moment
They’ll be called IS – SC
Illegitimate recombination, transformation
Are just two
Of the acts that we do daily
In and out of each of you
We are nature’s way of giving
Special functions which you’ll use
To survive contamination
In the stuff they call their foods.
Conjugation, penetration, consummation
Oh that’s great
De-repress your inhibition
Find a Mate and aggregate
Now, penetrate the membrane
Right on to the chromosome
If you miss, your just aplasmid
Try to be an episome