Infection by choleraphage phi 138: bacteriophage DNA and replicative intermediates.
AUTOR(ES)
Chowdhury, R
RESUMO
Choleraphage phi 138 contains a linear, double-stranded, circularly permuted DNA molecule of 30 X 10(6) daltons or 45 kilobase pairs. Upon infection, the host DNA is degraded, and synthesis of phage-specific DNA is detectable 20 min after infection. The phage utilizes primarily the host DNA degradation products for its own DNA synthesis. A physical map of phi 138 DNA was constructed with the restriction endonucleases Bg/II, HindIII, and PstI. A concatemeric replicative DNA intermediate equivalent to eight mature genome lengths was identified. The concatemer was shown to be the precursor for the synthesis of mature bacteriophage DNA which is subsequently packaged by a headful mechanism.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=252827Documentos Relacionados
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