The Journal of General Physiology
Avanti Polar Lipids
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The Journal of General Physiology, Vol 44, 585-603, Copyright © 1961 by The Rockefeller University Press


ARTICLE

The Inheritance of the Glucose Component of the Phage Nucleic Acids

Margeris A. Jesaitis 1

1 From The Rockefeller Institute

The wild type strains of T2 and T6 bacteriophages differ in their host range specificity, efficiency of plating on E. coli K12, and in glucose content. A study of the inheritance of these three differentiating characteristics has revealed that they are transmitted both upon serial passage of the viruses and when the two phages are crossed. It has been found, furthermore, that an extensive recombination takes place upon crossing. Four types of hybrid phages have been isolated from the progeny of crosses, which had a glucose content of one of the parental phages, and either the host range specificity or efficiency of plating or both of the other. The characteristics of each hybrid were found to be hereditarily stable. It has been concluded that the transmission of the characteristics under consideration is determined genetically and that the genes which control them are not closely linked. Since the glucose content of a phage is determined by the degree of glucosylation of its nucleic acid, the T2 and T6 phages apparently contain genes which control certain chemical properties of their nucleic acid.

Submitted on July 25, 1960


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