Host-induced modification of phage T2 to T*2 was discovered in 1952. This phenomenon, a reversible alteration in viral host range resulting from a single growth cycle in certain bacterial hosts, is an 'epigenetic' change. In 1963 the chemical basis for the T* modification was shown to be the loss of DNA glucosylation, which resulted from T-even phage growth in cells lacking the glucosyl donor UDPG. Thus, DNA glucosylation of T-even phages was the first recognized epigenetic signal. © 2009 Landes Bioscience.
CITATION STYLE
Hattman, S. (2009). The first recognized epigenetic signal: DNA glucosylation of T-even bacteriopages. Epigenetics, 4(3), 150–151. https://doi.org/10.4161/epi.4.3.8444
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