Filamentous phage: Structure and biology

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Abstract

Ff filamentous phage (fd, M13 and f1) of Escherichia coli have been the workhorse of phage display technology for the past 30 years. Dominance of Ff over other bacteriophage in display technology stems from the titres that are about 100-fold higher than any other known phage, efficacious transformation ensuring large library size and superior stability of the virion at high temperatures, detergents and pH extremes, allowing broad range of biopanning conditions in screening phage display libraries. Due to the excellent understanding of infection and assembly requirements, Ff phage have also been at the core of phage-assisted continual protein evolution strategies (PACE). This chapter will give an overview of the Ff filamentous phage structure and biology, emphasizing those properties of the Ff phage life cycle and virion that are pertinent to phage display applications.

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Rakonjac, J., Russel, M., Khanum, S., Brooke, S. J., & Rajič, M. (2017). Filamentous phage: Structure and biology. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 1053, pp. 1–20). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-72077-7_1

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