Interactions of Lactobacillus bulgaricus Temperate Bacteriophage 0448 with Host Strains

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RESUMO

Lactobacillus bulgaricus LT4(0448) is a lysogenic strain from which a temperate bacteriophage can be induced by mitomycin C or UV irradiation. Lactobacillus lactis CNRZ 326 is an indicator strain for the temperate phage 0448, but this strain lyses only in the presence of Ca2+ ions. A resistant culture developed secondarily after phage lysis and grew normally in MRS broth but again lysed abruptly if Ca2+ ions were added after two or three transfers. This behavior of the secondary culture and its subcultures is explained by a heterogeneous and fluctuating bacterial population, including clones identical to L. lactis 326, which were sensitive to 0448 and which formed rough colonies, as does the indicator. The proportion of these clones increased in the course of transfers in MRS, explaining lysis when Ca2+ was added. The population also included clones which formed smooth colonies (S clones). SI clones, which could not be induced by mitomycin C, were the major type in the initial culture, although they were sensitive to temperate phage 0448. The SI population then decreased and was gradually replaced by SII clones, inducible by mitomycin C and resistant to 0448. These SII clones were lysogenized clones, 326(0448), whose stability was confirmed by growth in the presence of an antiphage serum. When L. bulgaricus LT4(0448) was treated with mitomycin C, several cured LT4 clones were obtained that were related to the clones of the indicator L. lactis 326; they formed rough colonies. They also became sensitive to lytic phages or temperate phages active against L. lactis 326 and insensitive to lytic phages which lysed L. bulgaricus LT4(0448). This suggests that phage 0448 can lead to a lysogenic conversion of host strain LT4.

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