Publication | Open Access
Dissociation by Chelating Agents and Substructure of the Thermophilic Bacteriophage TP84
40
Citations
16
References
1971
Year
BiochemistryNatural SciencesThermophilic Bacteriophage Tp84Chelate InactivationBacteriologyOligonucleotideMolecular BiologyDna ReplicationBacteriophagePhage BiologyProkaryotic VirusIntact PhageMicrobiologyEffective DissociationMedicineChemical KineticsStructural Biology
The thermophilic bacteriophage TP84 is dissociated into its head, tail, and released deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) by chelating agents such as ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and phosphate. The phage is more sensitive to EDTA than to phosphate, and dialysis against either agent causes more effective dissociation than standing in their presence. The tail possesses a knobbed structure which is inserted into the head of the intact phage and to which the DNA appears to be attached. The method of dissociating TP84 described in this paper provides a source of undamaged structural components and intact strands of DNA for subsequent investigations. A possible mechanism of chelate inactivation is discussed.
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