Effects of Mitomycin C and Thymidine Deprivation on Lysogenic and Sensitive Strains of Bacillus megaterium1

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RESUMO

A triple auxotroph of Bacillus megaterium strain KM was lysogenized with a phage suspension from B. megaterium 899a. The lysogenic and phage-sensitive derivatives of KM were found to die at the same exponential rate during thymineless incubation, despite the fact that the lysogenic strain became induced. The lysogenic strain was also induced by mitomycin C, and died at an exponential rate which was approximately twice that of the sensitive strain. With both strains, the lethality of mitomycin C was the same in the presence and absence of thymidine; thymidine was required for maximal phage production. Mitomycin C preferentially inhibited deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis of both strains for the first 60 min. The (DNA) synthetic ability of the lysogenic strain was subsequently restored, due to phage production. Since there was no evidence that sensitive strains of KM contained other inducible elements (prophage or probacteriocins), it is concluded that both thymineless death and mitomycin C death can occur via mechanisms not involving induction.

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