bacteriophage

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bacteriophage
bacteriophage Biol. (bækˈtɪərɪəʊfeɪdʒ, -fɑːʒ) [ad. F. bactériophage (F. d'Herelle 1917, in Comptes Rendus CLXV. 375), f. as bacteriolysis + -phage.] A minute organism or agent which destroys bacteria. Hence ˌbacteriˈophagy, the action of a bacteriophage; bacˌterioˈphagal, -ˈphagic adjs., of, pertain... Oxford English Dictionary
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Bacteriophage
In July 2007, the same bacteriophage were approved for use on all food products. The largest bacteriophage genomes reach a size of 735 kb.Bacteriophage genomes can be highly mosaic, i.e. the genome of many phage species appear to be wikipedia.org
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Transformer Model Generated Bacteriophage Genomes ...
2 days ago — Transformer-generated sequences had varied but realistic genome lengths and 58% were classified as viral by geNomad. However, the sequences ...
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Moron (bacteriophage)
A moron, in the context of bacteriophage genetics, is an extra gene in a prophage genome without a function in the phage's lysogenic cycle. The term moron comes from the notion that the additional genes mean that these bacteriophage genomes have "more on" them. wikipedia.org
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Has there been evidence that there has been coevolution in E. Coli strains with the T4 bacteriophage? According to Evolution of T4-related phages, there have been multiple instances of evolution in the T4 coliphages. ...
High-level answer: Yes. Almost by definition there might have to be coevolution between a phage and a host, in the same way that humans coevolve with our viruses (in the form of e.g. immune repertoire). Pathogens kill/disadvantage susceptible hosts, imposing a selective cost to susceptibility. Detai...
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Bacteriophage Mu
Bacteriophage Mu, also known as mu phage or mu bacteriophage, is a muvirus (the first of its kind to be identified) of the family Myoviridae which has Additionally, Montano et al. created a crystal structure of the Mu bacteriophage transpososome, allowing for a detailed understanding of the process Mu wikipedia.org
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Rapunzel bacteriophage
The Rapunzel bacteriophage (also known as the Rapunzel phage or as P76-26) is a bacteriophage with a very long tail mesuring in at 1 micrometers making this bacteriophage having the record for having the longest tail of any bacteriophage. wikipedia.org
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What is a "monomeric polypeptide"? In the sentence: "Bacteriophage (viral) polymerases are typically monomeric polypeptides". I know that polypeptides are chains of amino acids monomers. But what is a "monomeric poly...
_Monomer_ in this context means the protein has only one polypeptide chain. In some proteins, after the individual chains have folded into their 3D or tertiary structure, they associate (generally non-covalently) into a higher order or quaternary structure. A protein with a quaternary structure cont...
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Bacteriophage f2
It is closely related to bacteriophage MS2 and assigned to the same species. History f2 was the first RNA-containing bacteriophage to be isolated, reported in 1961. wikipedia.org
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M13 bacteriophage
M13 is one of the Ff phages (fd and f1 are others), a member of the family filamentous bacteriophage (inovirus). See also Phage display Phagemid Filamentous bacteriophage References Further reading Inoviridae wikipedia.org
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Can viruses that normally infect eukaryotic cells also infect bacteria? Can standard viruses infect bacteria? I'm not speaking of bacteriophage but typical RNA and DNA virus such as influenza and Ebola.
But I think "bacteriophage" is a polyphyletic name of which was defined by the ability of infecting bacteria, but not defined by the genetic, evolutionary It seems that if a species (or a taxon in a higher taxonomic level) of virus is infectious to bacteria, it will be classified as a member of the bacteriophage
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Bacteriophage Qbeta
Bacteriophage Qbeta (Qubevirus durum), commonly referred to as Qbeta or Qβ, is a positive-strand RNA virus which infects bacteria that have F-pili, most Bacteriophage Qβ enters its host cell after binding to the side of the F-pilus. wikipedia.org
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Bacteriophage P2
Bacteriophage P2, scientific name Escherichia virus P2, is a temperate phage that infects E. coli. Discovery Bacteriophage P2 was first isolated by G. Bertani from the Lisbonne and Carrère strain of E. coli in 1951. wikipedia.org
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Bacteriophage MS2
MS2 is a member of a family of closely related bacterial viruses that includes bacteriophage f2, bacteriophage Qβ, R17, and GA. See also bacteriophage bacteriophage f2 bacteriophage Qβ phi-X174 phage References External links Complete genome (also isolates R17, DL16, and wikipedia.org
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