Author:
Goel Usha,Kauri Tiiu,Kushner Donn J.,Ackermann Hans-W.
Abstract
A number of bacteria and their phages were isolated from a saltern near Alicante, Spain. One isolate, Vibrio B1, a moderate halophile that is probably a strain of Vibrio costicola, was host to a lytic phage, UTAK. Studies of the host bacterium included the effects of salt concentrations on the action of a number of inhibitory agents. Phage UTAK has a head, a tail, and a baseplate. It contains 80 kbp of double-stranded DNA with no unusual bases. It was stable for long periods in the absence of high salt concentrations and even in distilled water. Salt concentrations had little effect on adsorption of UTAK to its host but resulted in considerable changes in burst size. It appears that phages of halophilic and salt-tolerant eubacteria, and also of some marine bacteria, have much lower salt requirements for stability than the phages of halophilic archaebacteria. Our results suggest that ionic controls of phage replication in these eubacteria may differ from those of growth.Key words: halophiles, Vibrio sp., bacteriophage, salt responses.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
14 articles.
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