Chelating Agent Shock of Bacteriophage T5

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RESUMO

When two strains of phage T5 (heat-susceptible form T5st+ and its heat-resistant mutant T5st) were placed in solutions containing various high concentrations of chelating agents (sodium citrate and ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) at room temperature, they could be effectively inactivated by rapid dilution in distilled water of relatively low temperatures (2 to 37 C). This phenomenon has been termed “chelating agent shock” (CAS). The susceptibility of phage T5 to CAS increased with an increase in the concentration of chelating agents and with an increase in temperature of the water used for rapid dilution. Under any given condition, T5st+ was much more sensitive to CAS than was T5st. Phage T5 was protected against inactivation by the addition of monovalent or divalent metal salts, but not by the addition of nonionic solutes, to the shocking water prior to CAS treatment. This finding is compatible with the view that cations combined with the phage protein are removed by the chelating agent, although no metal ion has been identified in the phage protein. Alternatively, since the chelating agents used are polyanions, they may bind relatively tightly to the protein subunits in the head of T5, thereby distorting the structure of the phage head. Rapid dilution of these distorted particles could lead to loss of phage DNA. No evidence for recovery of phage activity could be obtained by the addition of metal salts to the inactivated phage after CAS. The morphological properties of phage inactivated by CAS are similar to those of heat-inactivated T5 phage. Electron micrographs showed that most of the phage particles consisted of empty head membranes; some of the particles had lost their tails. Both heritable and nonheritable resistance to heat was accompanied by resistance to CAS in phage T5. The sensitive element detected by each test seemed to be the same.

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