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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Bacterial fusion assayed by a prophage complementation test.

C Sanchez-Rivas, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1979 - 
- Vol. 137, Iss: 3, pp 1340-1345
TLDR
Evidence is presented that fusion occurs in two steps, one polyethylene glycol dependent, the other energy requiring, the bacterial growth medium affects the ability of the protoplasts to fuse and to regenerate a cell wall.
Abstract
In previous studies of bacterial protoplast fusion, only the frequencies of cell wall regeneration and of bacterial recombination were determined. In this work the frequency of the heterozygous fusion products is measured by prophage complementation. Two multiply marked nonsuppressing strains of Bacillus subtilis, each lysogenic for a different Sus mutant of the phage phi 105, were induced by mitomycin C, protoplasted, fused, and, after dilution in hypertonic broth, incubated until plating with phi 105-sensitive indicator bacteria. When cell lysis was avoided, the frequency of the heterozygous fused cells could be determined from the number of infectious centers produced. The very high frequencies observed are in good agreement with those determined directly, with nonlysogenic strains, by electron microscopic examination of the fused protoplasts (C. Frehel, A. M. Lheritier, C. Sanchez-Rivas, and P. Schaeffer, J. Bacteriol. 137:1354--1361, 1979). Evidence is presented that fusion occurs in two steps, one polyethylene glycol dependent, the other energy requiring. The bacterial growth medium affects the ability of the protoplasts to fuse and to regenerate a cell wall. When experiments using different growth media were compared, an inverse relationship between these abilities was observed, and a direct relationship appeared between the heterozygotes (corrected for wall regeneration) and the recombinant bacteria that were found.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Protoplast fusion — a tool for genetic manipulation and breeding in industrial microorganisms

TL;DR: The protoplast fusion technique, in providing a mechanism by which genetic recombination can be readily achieved, should be of great potential in empirical breeding and strain improvement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Variations of the Envelope Composition of Bacillus subtilis During Growth in Hyperosmotic Medium

TL;DR: During hyperosmotic growth, the cell wall increased in thickness, and among the membrane lipids, glycolipid and cardiolipin increased in parallel with a decrease in phosphatidylglycerol, and the fatty acid composition was modified, and an increase in saturated straight chain with a decreases of saturated iso-branched fatty acids was observed.
Book ChapterDOI

Molecular properties, genetics, and biosynthesis of Bacillus subtilis succinate dehydrogenase complex.

TL;DR: This chapter discusses the molecular properties, genetics, and biosynthesis of Bacillus subtilis succinate dehydrogenase complex, a membrane-bound iron-sulfur flavoprotein that is similar in composition to Mitochondrial and bacterial SDH and membrane- bound fumarate reductase in anaerobic and facultative bacteria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parameters governing bacterial regeneration and genetic recombination after fusion of Bacillus subtilis protoplasts.

TL;DR: It is concluded that regeneration of recombinant-forming cells is independently determined and not closely related to the average regeneration for the population, and fusion events are always adequate to produce substantially more potential recombinants than are registered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconstitution of succinate dehydrogenase in Bacillus subtilis by protoplast fusion.

TL;DR: The nomenclature for the genetics of SDH in B. subtilis is revised and all mutations which give an SDH-negative phenotype will be called sdh followed by an isolation number, and the designation citF will be omitted.
References
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Book

Experiments in molecular genetics

TL;DR: Molecular Genetics (Biology): An Overview | Sciencing Experimental in Molecular Genetics Experiments in molecular genetics (1972 edition) | Open ...
Journal ArticleDOI

Production of mammalian somatic cell hybrids by means of polyethylene glycol treatment

TL;DR: Polyethylene glycol is very effective in producing hybrids capable of indefinite multiplication even in cases, such as early passage human skin fibroblasts and lymphocytes, known to be highly recalcitrant to other treatments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic recombination through protoplast fusion in Streptomyces.

TL;DR: Recombination frequencies achieved by this technique are so high that selectable markers could be dispensed with, at least in certain kinds of strain improvement programmes, and the availability of a simple generally applicable procedure to recombine actinomycete strains at high frequency is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fusion of bacterial protoplasts

TL;DR: It is concluded that the observed formation of prototropic bacteria is due to protoplast fusion, a process which does not induce prophage development, and that the only stable products of the resulting diploid state are haploid recombinants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fusion of protoplasts of Bacillus megaterium

TL;DR: Protoplasts of two doubly auxotrophis strains of Bacillus megaterium were fused by nascent calcium phosphate or by polyethylene glycol treatment, and then allowed to revert to bacillary form on selection media, suggesting that segregation was transitory.
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