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Published Papers
| Independent Functions of Viral Protein and Nucleic Acid in Growth of Bacteriophage. September 20, 1952. |
Page 07 [45]
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Authors: Martha Chase, Alfred Hershey
![Page 07 [45] Page 07 [45]](hersheychase-pg07-xl.jpg) Page 07 [45]
| Title: |
Independent Functions of Viral Protein and Nucleic Acid in Growth of Bacteriophage [7 of 18] |
| Creator: |
Chase, Martha |
| Contributor: |
Hershey, Alfred Day, 1908 |
| Publisher: |
Journal of General Physiology |
| Date: |
1952-09-20 |
| Subject: |
Molecular biology Molecular genetics
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| Description: |
From the Journal of General Physiology Vol. 36, No. 1. |
| Type: |
Text |
| Format: |
text/plain |
| Language: |
en |
| Identifier: |
hersheychase-pg07.jpg |
| Source: |
Master scanned with Epson GT-10000+ flatbed scanner at 600 dpi. |
| Rights: |
http://osulibrary.orst.edu/specialcollections/coll/pauling/dna/copyright.html |
| Full Text: |
44 VIRAL PROTEIN AND NUCLEIC ACID IN BACTERIOPHAGE GROWTH
that shown in Table III, and the content of P" was only slightly less after
lysis. The phage liberated during freezing and thawing was also titrated in
this experiment. The lysis occurred without appreciable liberation of phage
in suspensions frozen up to and including the 16th minute, and the 20 min-
ute sample yielded only five per bacterium. Another sample of the culture
formalinized at 30 minutes, and centrifuged without freezing, contained 66
per cent of the P12 in non-sedimentable form. The yield of extracellular phage
at 30 minutes was 108 per bacterium, and the sedimented material consisted
largely of formless debris but contained also many apparently intact cell
membranes.
T.ULE III
Sensitization of Intracellular Phage to DA'ase by Freezing, Thawing, and Fixation
with Formaldehyde
Unadsorbed Infected cells
phage frozen, frozen, thawed, Infected cells
i thawed, fixed fixed fixed only
Low speed sediment fraction
Total P12.................................... 71 ,96
Acid-soluble... . . . ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 0.5
Acid-soluble after DNase................... . . 59 28
Low speed supernatant fraction
Total P12.................................... 29 14
Acid-soluble.......................... ....... 1 0.8 0.4
Acid-soluble after DNase............... . . . . . . 11 21 5.5
The figures express per cent of total P12 in the original phage, or its adsorbed fraction.
We draw the following conclusions from the experiments in which cells
infected with P32-labeled phage are subjected to freezing and thawing.
1. Plnage DNA becomes sensitive to DNAse after adsorption to bacteria in
buffer under conditions in which no known growth process occurs (Benzer,
1912; D ulbecco, 1952).
2. The cell membrane can be made permeable to DNase under conditions
that do not permit the escape of either the intracellular P3= or the bulk of the
cell contents.
3. Even if the cells lyse as a result of freezing and thawing, permitting escape
of other cell constituents, most of the P3'= derived from phage remains inside
the cell membranes, as do the mature phage progeny.
4. The intracellular P3' derived from phage is largely freed during spon-
taneous lysis accompanied by phage liberation.
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