PROTECTION OF BACTERIOPHAGE AGAINST X-RAYS BY HIGH CONCENTRATIONS OF A NEUTRAL SALT

Author:

Bachofer C. S.1,Pottinger M. Aelred1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Biology, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame

Abstract

Protection of bacteriophage T1 against x-rays was tested in the presence of concentrations of (NH4)2SO4 ranging from 10–6 M to saturation (4.26 M). Survival of T1 in concentrations of 10–6 to 10–3 M after irradiation did not differ significantly from survival in distilled water after irradiation. From 10–3 M to 10–1 M there was a steep rise in survival, with a leveling off as the concentration approached saturation, giving over-all a 2,000-fold increase in survival. The mechanism of salting out protection in these experiments is apparently due chiefly to dehydration, which protects the virus particles against the indirect effects of x-irradiation. Postirradiation effects, tested by the inactivation of phage added to irradiated media, approach in magnitude the effects obtained by irradiation of the phage particles themselves in the various solutions. Filter paper adsorption analyses indicate a close correlation between concentrations of (NH4)2SO4, ability of the filter paper to adsorb phage, and protection against x-rays, both during and after irradiation.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Physiology

Cited by 9 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Effet du pH sur la radioprotection des grains d'orge par les sels minéraux;Experientia;1966-02

2. Induction par les Rayons X de la Destruction de L'acide Désoxyribonucléique d'Escherichia Freundii;International Journal of Radiation Biology and Related Studies in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine;1963-01

3. Inactivation of Viruses;General Virology;1959

4. A Short-Lived Effect of X-Irradiation on Rubidium Absorption by Excised Mung Bean Roots;Radiation Research;1958-11

5. Genetics of Microorganisms;Annual Review of Microbiology;1954-10

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