CAMPBELL BIOLOGY VOL. 1 W/ACCESS
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781323744130
Author: Reece
Publisher: PEARSON C
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Chapter 19, Problem 4TYU
Summary Introduction
Introduction: Bacteria are single-celled prokaryotic microorganisms. A bacteriophage is also called as bacterial virus that is formed when a virus infects a bacterium. T2 and T4 are enterobacteria phages that infect and kill E. coli. They are also known as T-even phages because they are double stranded. T-even phages are commonly used as model organisms for various genetic studies. The experiments performed by Hershey and Chase using bacteriophages already proved that DNA is the genetic material of inheritance.
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If a single bacteriophage infects one E. coli cell present on a lawn of bacteria and, upon lysis, yields 200 viable viruses, how many phages will exist in a single plaque if three more lytic cycles occur?
Which type of phages can perform generalized transduction?
In Hershey-Chase experiment, bacteriophages protein coats were tagged with radioactive isotope S-32. These phages were used to infect E. coli cells and the cells were further centrifuged to form pellets.
Why was the radioactivity level of S-32 found greater outside the cells compared to the E. coli cell pellets? Explain briefly.
If the experiment is repeated in the same manner but this time the phage protein coats are labelled with isotope X and the phage DNA with isotope Y, which isotope’s radioactivity will be found in greater amounts in the E. coli cell pellets after centrifugation? Explain briefly.
Chapter 19 Solutions
CAMPBELL BIOLOGY VOL. 1 W/ACCESS
Ch. 19.1 - Prob. 1CCCh. 19.1 - MAKE CONNECTIONS Bacteriophages were used to...Ch. 19.2 - Compare the effect on the host cell of a lytic...Ch. 19.2 - MAKE CONNECTIONS Compare the CRISPR-Cas system to...Ch. 19.2 - Prob. 3CCCh. 19.2 - Why is HIV called a retrovirus?Ch. 19.2 - Prob. 5CCCh. 19.3 - Describe two ways in which a preexisting virus can...Ch. 19.3 - Contrast horizontal and vertical transmission of...Ch. 19.3 - WHAT IF? TMV has been isolated from virtually all...
Ch. 19 - Are viruses generally considered living or...Ch. 19 - Prob. 19.2CRCh. 19 - Prob. 19.3CRCh. 19 - Which of the following characteristics,...Ch. 19 - Emerging viruses arise by (A) mutation of existing...Ch. 19 - Prob. 3TYUCh. 19 - Prob. 4TYUCh. 19 - Prob. 5TYUCh. 19 - DRAW IT Redraw Figure 19.8 to show the replicative...Ch. 19 - EVOLUTION CONNECTION The successof some viruses...Ch. 19 - SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY When bacteria infect an animal,...Ch. 19 - WRITE ABOUT A THEME: ORGANIZATION While viruses...Ch. 19 - Prob. 10TYU
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Need a deep-dive on the concept behind this application? Look no further. Learn more about this topic, biology and related others by exploring similar questions and additional content below.Similar questions
- Imagine that you are a student in Alfred Hershey and Martha Chase’s lab in the late 1940s. You are given five test tubes containing E. Coli bacteria infected with T2 bacteriophages that have been labeled with either 32P or 35S. Unfortunately, you forget to mark the tubes and are now uncertain about which tubes is which. You performed their blender experiment and got the following results. Which tube out of these 5 contains E. Coli infected with 32P-labeled phage? Explain your answer.arrow_forwardSome mutations that occur in bacteria can cause the loss of phage receptors, and these bacteria become phage resistant. In order for a phage to infect the host bacterium, it is preferred that the cell wall is newly synthesized.why ?arrow_forwardOne of the reasons why phage therapy has not been applied widely is that bacteria can become resistant to bacteriophages as well, through mutations in genes encoding for specific proteins. What would be a protein in the bacterial cell that, if mutated, would make that cell resistant to phage infection?arrow_forward
- After a phage injects its DNA into a bacterial cell, the cell begins making proteins that make up the phage coat. Why does the same thing not happen when a generalized transducing particle injects the DNA it carries?arrow_forwardWhich of the processes of information transfer illustrated in Figure are required for the T2 phage reproduction illustrated in Figure ?arrow_forwardAccording to Philip Bell’s viral eukaryogenesis hypothesis, genes for DNA replication, RNA transcription, protein translation, and histone proteins were all provided by: an endosymbiotic gram-negative eubacterium an endosymbiotic archaeobacterium a gram-positive eubacterial host cell a double-stranded DNA virus an archaeobacterial host cellarrow_forward
- Draw and label the E. coli host cell/T4 bacteriophage interaction.?arrow_forwardWhat is lambda phage DNA?arrow_forwardWhat structures on bacterial host cells serve to allow bacteriophage to recognize them? What component of these structures may be most readily recognizable to bacteriophages?arrow_forward
- When bacteriophage P1 causes E. coli to lyse, the resulting materialis called a P1 lysate. What type of genetic material would befound in most of the P1 phages in the lysate? What kind of geneticmaterial is occasionally found within a P1 phage?arrow_forwardHow many bacteriophage particles were isolated from a single plaque? Howmany different strains of phage would be present?arrow_forwardHow many tailed bacteriophages are there, and where are they located?arrow_forward
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