JVI Figure table search 04
Home Help [Feedback] [For Subscribers] [Archive] [Search] [Contents]
This Article
Right arrow Full Text (PDF)
Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
Right arrow Alert me if a correction is posted
Services
Right arrow Similar articles in this journal
Right arrow Similar articles in PubMed
Right arrow Alert me to new issues of the journal
Right arrow Download to citation manager
Right arrowReprints and Permissions
Right arrow Copyright Information
Right arrow Books from ASM Press
Right arrow MicrobeWorld
Citing Articles
Right arrow Citing Articles via Google Scholar
Google Scholar
Right arrow Articles by van der Avoort, H G
Right arrow Articles by Weisbeek, P J
Right arrow Search for Related Content
PubMed
Right arrow PubMed Citation
Right arrow Articles by van der Avoort, H G
Right arrow Articles by Weisbeek, P J

 Previous Article  |  Next Article 

J Virol. 1984 May; 50(2): 533-540

Regions of incompatibility in single-stranded DNA bacteriophages phi X174 and G4.

H G van der Avoort, A van der Ende, G A van Arkel and P J Weisbeek

ABSTRACT

The intracellular presence of a recombinant plasmid containing the intercistronic region between the genes H and A of bacteriophage phi X174 strongly inhibits the conversion of infecting single-stranded phi X DNA to parental replicative-form DNA. Also, transfection with single-stranded or double-stranded phi X174 DNA of spheroplasts from a strain containing such a "reduction" plasmid shows a strong decrease in phage yield. This phenomenon, the phi X reduction effect, was studied in more detail by using the phi X174 packaging system, by which plasmid DNA strands that contain the phi X(+) origin of replication were packaged as single-stranded DNA into phi X phage coats. These "plasmid particles" can transduce phi X-sensitive host cells to the antibiotic resistance coded for by the vector part of the plasmid. The phi X reduction sequence in the resident plasmid strongly affected the efficiency of the transduction process, but only when the transducing plasmid depended on primosome-mediated initiation of DNA synthesis for its conversion to double-stranded DNA. The combination of these results led to a model for the reduction effect in which the phi X reduction sequence interacted with an intracellular component that was present in limiting amounts and that specified the site at which phi X174 replicative-form DNA replication takes place. The phi X reduction sequence functioned as a viral incompatibility element in a way similar to the membrane attachment site model for plasmid incompatibility. In the DNA of bacteriophage G4, a sequence with a similar biological effect on infecting phages was identified. This reduction sequence not only inhibited phage G4 propagation, but also phi X174 infection.


J Virol. 1984 May; 50(2): 533-540







Home Help [Feedback] [For Subscribers] [Archive] [Search] [Contents]
J. Bacteriol. Mol. Cell. Biol. Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev.
Clin. Vaccine Immunol. ALL ASM JOURNALS

Copyright © 1984 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.