The ability of single phage particles to form plaques and to multiply in liquid cultures

A - Papers appearing in refereed journals

Kleczkowski, A. and Kleczkowski, J. 1951. The ability of single phage particles to form plaques and to multiply in liquid cultures. Microbiology. 5 (2), pp. 346-356. https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-5-2-346

AuthorsKleczkowski, A. and Kleczkowski, J.
Abstract

SUMMARY: The results of testing a bacteriophage to a strain of clover nodule bacteria using young (1 day) and old ( 5 days) bacterial cultures both fit to the hypothesis that phage multiplication can be initiated by single phage particles. As the same phage preparations gave more plaques on solid media and higher proportions of liquid cultures in which phage multiplication could be detected, with young than with old bacterial cultures, the fit to the hypothesis is not an evidence that every single phage particle will multiply. It may be so when young bacterial cultures are used, although there is no positive evidence for it. With older bacterial cultures definitely only a proportion of viable phage particles succeed in starting phage multiplication, the proportion decreasing with the increasing age of bacterial cultures used for testing.

Year of Publication1951
JournalMicrobiology
Journal citation5 (2), pp. 346-356
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1099/00221287-5-2-346
Open accessPublished as bronze (free) open access
Publisher's version
Copyright license
Publisher copyright
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Print01 Jun 1951
PublisherMicrobiology Society
ISSN1350-0872

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