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lysogeny
ly·sog·e·ny L0311475 (lī-sŏj′ə-nē)n. The fusion of the nucleic acid of a bacteriophage with that of a host bacterium so that the potential exists for the newly integrated genetic material to be transmitted to daughter cells at each subsequent cell division.lysogeny (laɪˈsɒdʒənɪ) n (Microbiology) the biological process in which a bacterium is infected by a bacteriophage that integrates its DNA into that of the host such that the host is not destroyed lysogenic adjThesaurusNoun | 1. | lysogeny - the condition of a host bacterium that has incorporated a phage into its own genetic material; "when a phage infects a bacterium it can either destroy its host or be incorporated in the host genome in a state of lysogeny"lysogenicitycondition - a mode of being or form of existence of a person or thing; "the human condition" |
lysogeny
lysogeny: see bacteriophagebacteriophage , virus that infects bacteria and sometimes destroys them by lysis, or dissolution of the cell. Bacteriophages, or phages, have a head composed of protein, an inner core of nucleic acid—either deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) or ribonucleic acid (RNA)—and a ..... Click the link for more information. ; recombinationrecombination, process of "shuffling" of genes by which new combinations can be generated. In recombination through sexual reproduction, the offspring's complete set of genes differs from that of either parent, being rather a combination of genes from both parents. ..... Click the link for more information. .Lysogeny Almost all strains of bacteria are lysogenic; that is, they have the capacity on rare occasions to lyse with the liberation of particles of bacteriophage (see illustration). Such particles can be detected by their ability to form plaques (colonies of bacteriophage) on lawns of sensitive (indicator) bacteria. The genetic determinant of the capacity of lysogenic bacteria to produce bacteriophage is a repressed phage genome (provirus) which exists in the bacterium in one of two states: (1) integrated into the bacterial chromosome (most cases), or (2) occupying some extra-chromosomal location (rare cases). Life cycles of phage and bacterial host Bacteriophages which have the potential to exist as provirus are called temperate phages. When the provirus is integrated into the bacterial genome, it is called prophage. When the germinal substance (deoxyribonucleic acid or deoxyribonucleoprotein) of certain temperate phages enters a sensitive bacterium, the outcome may be death (lysis) for the bacterium as a result of phage multiplication, or it may result in the integration of the phage nucleic acid into the host genome (as a prophage), with the formation of a stable lysogenic bacterium. The lysogenic strain is designated by the name of the sensitive strain followed, in parentheses, by the strain of lysogenizing phage, for example, Escherichia coli (λ). Such a bacterium differs from its nonlysogenic ancestor in one very special way: It is immune to lysis by phage homologous to its carried prophage. See Bacteriophage Lysogeny the genetically determined capacity of bacteria to undergo lysis, with the release of a bacteriophage, through a number of generations after direct infection. The theory of lysogeny was elaborated in 1950 by the French scientists A. Lwoff and A. Gutman, who showed that the lysogenic state is associated with the presence in bacterial cells of a potentially infectious structure called a prophage. In each generation of lysogenic bacteria a very small proportion of the cells (approximately one per million) undergoes lysis, releasing from 70 to 150 particles of temperate phage. The frequency of the conversion of the prophage to an infectious state (prophage induction) may be increased by a number of agents, such as ultraviolet rays. After infection of the bacterial cell by the temperate phage, the process of infection can develop in either of two directions: the lytic cycle or lysogenization. The lytic cycle, like the cycle in which the bacteria are infected with virulent phages, ends with lysis of the cells and the release of the progeny of the phage into the surrounding medium. In lysogenization, immunity to the infecting phage develops as a result of biosynthetic processes in the cell, phage DNA is incorporated by the bacterial DNA and subsequently replicated together with it as one of its components (prophage), and the bacterium survives and becomes lysogenic (see Figure 1). Figure 1. General diagram of lysogeny The fate of the cell is decided during the first stages of infection and depends chiefly on when immunity develops. Lysogenization may take place if the onset of immunity occurs before the development of the infection reaches the stage that leads irreversibly to lysis. Bacterial genomes may contain the prophages of several different phages simultaneously (multiple lysogeny), in which case the cells will be immune to all of the phages. Changes in several of the properties of the bacterial cell (lysogenic conversion) may result from lysogenization, owing to the acquisition by the bacterium of new genetic information. Artificially produced lysogenic bacteria do not differ in their properties from lysogenic bacteria found under natural conditions. Recovery, or loss of the prophage, occurs in a small proportion of the progeny of a lysogenic cell. The cells that have lost their prophage give rise to nonlysogenic lines. The frequency of this process may be increased by the action of ultraviolet rays. Thus, lysogeny, a complex form of viral infection in bacteria, may allow for a large number of cell generations between the moment the bacteria are infected with the phage and the lysis of the cells. REFERENCESLuria, S., and J. Darnell. Obshchaia virusologiia. Moscow, 1970. (Translated from English.) Ravin, V. K. Lizogeniia. Moscow, 1971.A. N. MAISURIANlysogeny[lī′säj·ə·nē] (microbiology) Lysis of bacteria, with the liberation of bacteriophage particles. lysogeny
lysogeny [li-soj´e-ne] the phenomenon in which a bacterium is infected by a temperature bacteriophage, the viral DNA is integrated in the chromosome of the host cell and replicated along with the host chromosome for many generations (the lysogenic cycle), and then production of virions and lysis of host cells (the lytic cycle) begins again. The lytic cycle is initiated spontaneously about once in 10,000 cell divisions or may be induced by ultraviolet light or chemical agents.ly·sog·e·ny (lī-soj'ĕ-nē), The phenomenon by which a bacterium is infected by a temperate bacteriophage with DNA that is integrated into the bacterial genome and replicates along with the bacterial DNA but remains latent or unexpressed; triggering of the lytic cycle may occur spontaneously or by certain agents and will result in the production of bacteriophage and lysis of the bacterial cell.lysogeny (lī-sŏj′ə-nē)n. The fusion of the nucleic acid of a bacteriophage with that of a host bacterium so that the potential exists for the newly integrated genetic material to be transmitted to daughter cells at each subsequent cell division.ly·sog·e·ny (lī-soj'ĕ-nē) The phenomenon by which a bacterium is infected by a temperate bacteriophage with DNA that is integrated into the bacterial genome and replicates along with the bacterial DNA but remains latent or unexpressed; triggering of the lytic cycle may occur spontaneously or by certain agents and will result in the production of bacteriophage and lysis of the bacterial cell. lysogeny a state in a living bacterium when it carries a nonvirulent TEMPERATE PHAGE. In this condition the phage DNA is repressed for lytic functions (see PROPHAGE and no progeny phages are produced. The DNA may integrate into the bacterial chromosome.lysogeny
Synonyms for lysogenynoun the condition of a host bacterium that has incorporated a phage into its own genetic materialSynonymsRelated Words |