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Plating Bacteriophage M13

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2017
A plaque of bacteriophage M13 derives from infection of a single bacterium by a single virus particle. The progeny particles infect neighboring bacteria, which, in turn, release another generation of daughter virus particles. If the bacteria are growing in semisolid medium (e.g., containing agar or agarose), then the diffusion of the progeny particles ...
Michael R, Green, Joseph, Sambrook
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Plating Bacteriophage M13

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2006
A plaque of bacteriophage M13 derives from infection of a single bacterium by a single virus particle. The progeny particles infect neighboring bacteria, which, in turn, release another generation of daughter virus particles. If the bacteria are growing in semisolid medium (e.g., containing agar or agarose), then the diffusion of the progeny particles ...
Joseph, Sambrook, David W, Russell
openaire   +2 more sources

Growing Bacteriophage M13 in Liquid Culture

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2017
Stocks of bacteriophage M13 are usually grown in liquid culture. The infected bacteria do not lyse but, instead, grow at a slower than normal rate to form a dilute suspension. The inoculum of bacteriophage is almost always a freshly picked plaque or a suspension of bacteriophage particles obtained from a single plaque, as described here. Infected cells
Michael R, Green, Joseph, Sambrook
openaire   +2 more sources

Growing Bacteriophage M13 in Liquid Culture

Cold Spring Harbor Protocols, 2006
Stocks of bacteriophage M13 are usually grown in liquid culture. The infected bacteria do not lyse but, instead, grow at a slower than normal rate to form a dilute suspension. The inoculum of bacteriophage is almost always a freshly picked plaque or a suspension of bacteriophage particles obtained from a single plaque, as described here. Infected cells
Joseph, Sambrook, David W, Russell
openaire   +2 more sources

M13 bacteriophage displaying disulfide-constrained microproteins

Gene, 1993
A display-phage library (TN2), displaying an 18-residue peptide fused to coat protein III, represents a collection of up to 8.55 x 10(6) peptides encoded by only 1.68 x 10(7) DNA sequences. Each displayed peptide has two fixed cysteine residues (allowing disulfide formation) and six variegated residues, four between the cysteines and one either side of
M A, McLafferty   +3 more
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Genetic control of bacteriophage M13 DNA synthesis

Journal of Molecular Biology, 1968
Abstract In the filamentous single-stranded DNA phage M13, the DNA replicates via the three steps shown in Figure 1: first, conversion of the infecting single-stranded molecule to a double-stranded replicative form; then, production of a pool of RF † molecules; finally, synthesis of progeny single strands.
D, Pratt, W S, Erdahl
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M13 bacteriophage production for large-scale applications

Bioprocess and Biosystems Engineering, 2014
Bacteriophage materials have the potential to revolutionize medicine, energy production and storage, agriculture, solar cells, optics and many other fields. To fulfill these needs, this study examined critical process parameters during phage propagation to increase phage production capability. A representative scale-down system was created in tube spin
Christopher M, Warner   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Structural characterization of bacteriophage M13 solubilization by amphiphiles

Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Protein Structure and Molecular Enzymology, 2002
The structural properties of bacteriophage M13 during disassembly were studied in different membrane model systems, composed of a homologue series of the detergents sodium octyl sulfate, sodium decyl sulfate, and sodium dodecyl sulfate. The structural changes during phage disruption were monitored by spin-labeled electron spin resonance (ESR) and ...
Stopar, D.   +3 more
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M13 Bacteriophages as Bioreceptors in Biosensor Device

2019
New recognition probes sensible, specific and robust is one of the major problems of biosensor assay. Detection biosensors has utilized antibodies or enzymes as bioreceptors; however, these have numerous disadvantages of limited binding sites and physico-chemical instabilities, can negatively affect capture and detection of target in diagnostic device.
De Plano, Laura M.   +6 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Cloning SV40 HindIII restriction fragments into M13 bacteriophage

Gene, 1982
Abstract The six Hind III restriction fragments of the simian virus 40 (SV40) genome were cloned into the bacteriophage M13mp5 vector to generate strand-specific hybridization probes.
K, Dixon   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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