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Studies on lysogeny ofStaphylococcus albus
Medical Microbiology and Immunology, 1974Lysogeny after Mitomycin C- and UV-induction was studied on 127 pathogenic strains of the speciesStaphylococcus albus. A lysogeny indicator set of 24Staphylococcus albus strains was used. All 127 examinedStaphylococcus albus strains could be shown to be lysogenic, sometimes even multilysogenic.
G, Pulverer +3 more
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2001
Publisher Summary Lysogeny and transduction describes a type of phage/host interaction and a method of bacterial gene transfer (procaryotic sex), respectively. This chapter describes methods that have been found useful in studying lysogeny and transduction in the marine environment. Lysogeny occurs when a phage enters into a stable symbiosis with its
John H. Paul, Sunny C. Jiang
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Publisher Summary Lysogeny and transduction describes a type of phage/host interaction and a method of bacterial gene transfer (procaryotic sex), respectively. This chapter describes methods that have been found useful in studying lysogeny and transduction in the marine environment. Lysogeny occurs when a phage enters into a stable symbiosis with its
John H. Paul, Sunny C. Jiang
openaire +1 more source
LYSOGENY IN A COAGULASE-NEGATIVE STAPHYLOCOCCUS
Canadian Journal of Microbiology, 1962A temperate phage (S-13), for which a coagulase-negative strain (SA-13) is lysogenic, was isolated during an investigation of lysogenicity in coagulase-negative staphylococci. Its indicator strain (SA-14) is also coagulase-negative and the phage can be propagated on it.
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Defective Lysogeny in Erwinia carotovora
Microbiology, 2002The electron microscopic study of several Erwinia carotovora strains showed that the SOS-induced cells of this pectolytic phytopathogenic bacterium produce particular phage parts (tails, heads, and baseplates) but do not assemble them into fully functional phage particles. E.
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Transduction of lysogeny in Escherichia coli
Virology, 1955Abstract Transduction provides a new tool for a genetic analysis of lysogeny. Recently, transduction has been shown by Lennox to occur, through phage P1, in various strains of Escherichia coli. Another strain of temperate phage has been isolated, which is also able to transfer genetic characters from a donor to an acceptor strain of E.
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Alternating lysis and lysogeny is a winning strategy in bacteriophages due to Parrondo's paradox
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2022Kang Hao Cheong, Tao Wen, Sean Benler
exaly

