Abstract
Escherichia coli cells infected with gene H mutants of bacteriophage phi X174 produce two types of particles. The 110S particles contain single-stranded circular DNA; the 110S particles are not infectious, although their DNA is infectious for E. coli spheroplasts. The second type of particles, 70S particles, contain a fragment of single-stranded DNA ranging from 0.2 to 0.5 genome in length. This fragment DNA anneals only to restriction enzyme fragments of replicative-form DNA from the portion of the molecule corresponding to the origin and early region of phi X174 single-stranded synthesis, although full-round single-stranded DNA synthesis is occurring in the H mutant-infected cells. Different H mutant phages produce different proportions of 70S to 110S particles; those mutants producing the most 70S also exhibit the largest amount of degradation of intracellularly labeled DNA during infection. These results suggest that in H mutant-infected cells, full-length single-stranded DNA is synthesized; varying amounts of degradation of the single-stranded material occur, and the resulting fragment DNA is subsequently incorporated into 70S particles.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
12 articles.
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