The Genetics of the Anti-immune Phenotype of Defective Lambda Lysogens
Abstract
The im+ and im− phases are hereditary for the whole line of cells. However, the cell populations always contain 0.1–1% of cells which give rise to colonies of the opposite phase. This phenomenon, called the “immunity phase shift,” is of a nonmutational character; when such temperature sensitive defective lysogens are deprived of immunity by heat, the whole im+ population shifts to the im− phase.
From these results the following conclusions were possible: (a) The two prophage mutations are sufficient to allow the bacteria to survive the absence of immunity. (b) The presence of an immunity specific cytoplasmic factor, called anti-immunity, antagonizes the establishment of immunity in the im− phase.
Starting from these points and aiming towards a definition of the genetics of the novel anti-immune phenotype we tried...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.609-620