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Laboratory of Phage-typing and Bacterial Genetics, Pasteur Institute of Brussels, Rue Engeland 642, B-1180 Brussels, Belgium
Correspondence
Jean-Pierre Gratia
jpgratia{at}yahoo.fr
With the aim of understanding sexual reproduction and phenotypic expression, a novel type of mating recently discovered in Escherichia coli was investigated. Termed spontaneous zygogenesis (or Z-mating), it differs from F-mediated conjugation. Its products proved phenotypically unstable, losing part of the phenotype for which they were selected. Inactivation of a parental chromosome in the zygote is strongly suggested by fluctuation tests, respreading experiments, analysis of reisolates, and segregation of non-viable cells detected by epifluorescence staining. Some phenotypically haploid subclones were interpreted as stable noncomplementing diploids carrying an inactivated co-replicating chromosome. Pedigree analysis indicated that the genetic composition of such cells consisted of parental genomes or one parental plus a recombinant genome. Inactivation of a chromosome carrying a prophage resulted in the disappearance of both the ability to produce phage particles and the immunity to superinfection. Phage production signalled transient reactivation of such a chromosome and constituted a sensitive test for stable noncomplementing diploidy. Chromosome inactivation thus appears to be a spontaneous event in bacteria.
-lactamase encoding plasmid; GDA, GratiaDeschuyteneer agar medium; LC/LCA, lactose-casein broth/agar; MA, minimal agar (variants with additives); NA, nutrient agar; Nx, nalidixic acid; Sm, streptomycin; Ncd, noncomplementing diploid; Szp+, spontaneous zygogenesis promoting; Z-mating, mating promoted by Szp+ bacteria
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