Author:
Lajudie Philippe de,Bogusz Didier
Abstract
Two rhizobiophages, RS1 and RS2, were isolated in Senegal from a soil sample and dry stem nodules of Sesbania rostrata, a tropical legume that is infected by two categories of Rhizobium strains: "stem strains," which nodulate both roots and stems (type strain, ORS571), and "root strains," which induce effective nodules only on roots. Both phages were found to have a host range restricted to ORS571; all root strains were found to be resistant. By electron microscopy, phage RS1 showed an hexagonal head 63 nm wide and a tail 87 nm long; phage RS2 revealed an hexagonal head 60 nm wide. Characterization of phage growth cycle by one-step growth experiments showed that the latent period was ca. 75 min for RS1 and ca. 4 h for RS2, that the rise period lasted ca. 2 h for both RS1 and RS2, and that the average burst size was ca. 100 for RS1 and 130 for RS2. Temperature denaturation occurred at 60–65 °C (RS1) and 45–50 °C (RS2). Serum neutralization tests revealed that the phages were not serologically related. In contrast to RS1, RS2 appeared to be temperate, since stable lysogens were isolated.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Genetics,Molecular Biology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
13 articles.
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