STUDIES ON THE MECHANISM OF TRANSDUCTION BY BACTERIOPHAGE phivgamma. I. GENETIC CHARACTERIZATION OF THE TRANSDUCING SEGMENT

1 Laboratory of Microbiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Brussels

The bacteriophage Phigamma, though related to the lambdoid phage phiv80, has unusual features in its specialized transduction and is being investigated to determine the mechanism of the transduction process. Genetic analysis of the transducing element gives evidence for a relatively long and uniform linear segment, up to about 1% of the E. coli chromosome, extending in either direction from the prophage attachment site, e.g., on the right side: att80-tonB-trpABCDE-cysB-pryF. The att end includes a variable amount of phage genome, probably very short in most particles. In a small fraction of the transducing particles the phage segment may be more extensive and, conversely, the bacterial segment is shorter, ending around cysB. The transducing segment from modificationless bacteria carries a site susceptible to the K-restriction system which affects the efficiency of transduction.

Submitted on April 30, 1976
Revised on August 26, 1976