Six related Staphylococcus phages spontaneously produced various abnormal head and tail structures: (i) giant capsids which were tailed and apparently contained nucleic acid; (ii) regular and irregular smooth polyheads; (iii) heads and polyheads with wavy outlines; (iv) mottled heads and polyheads; (v) abnormally long and short tails; and (vi) "double capsids" connected by a small bridge. Some of these structures are rare, or have not yet been reported. The frequency os specific aberrant particles varied from one phage to another. Length distribution of smooth irregular polyheads and of abnormal tails indicated that these structures assemble at random from protein synthesized in excess. These phages represent an interesting model for genetic and morphogentic studies.
CITATION STYLE
Ackermann, H. W., Berthiaume, L., Sonea, S., & Kasatiya, S. S. (1976). Structural aberrations in group A Staphylococcus bacteriophages. Journal of Virology, 18(2), 619–626. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.18.2.619-626.1976
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