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  2. Bacteriophage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacteriophage

    With lytic phages such as the T4 phage, bacterial cells are broken open (lysed) and destroyed after immediate replication of the virion. As soon as the cell is destroyed, the phage progeny can find new hosts to infect. [15] Lytic phages are more suitable for phage therapy. Some lytic phages undergo a phenomenon known as lysis inhibition, where ...

  3. Ff phages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ff_phages

    Assembled major coat protein, exploded view. The virion is a flexible filament (worm-like chain) about 6 nm in diameter and 900 nm long.Several thousand copies of a small (50 amino-acid residues) elongated alpha-helical major coat protein subunit (the product of gene 8, or p8) in an overlapping shingle-like array form a hollow cylinder enclosing the circular single-stranded DNA genome.

  4. Virion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virion

    A virion (plural, viria or virions), is an inert virus particle capable of invading a cell. Upon entering the cell, the virion disassembles and the genetic material from the virus takes control of the cell infrastructure, thus enabling the virus to replicate . [ 1 ]

  5. Escherichia virus T4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escherichia_virus_T4

    During assembly of the bacteriophage (phage) T4 virion, the morphogenetic proteins encoded by the phage genes interact with each other in a characteristic sequence. Maintaining an appropriate balance in the amounts of each of these proteins produced during viral infection appears to be critical for normal phage T4 morphogenesis. [13]

  6. Virus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virus

    Some bacteriophages, such as Enterobacteria phage T4, have a complex structure consisting of an icosahedral head bound to a helical tail, which may have a hexagonal base plate with protruding protein tail fibres. This tail structure acts like a molecular syringe, attaching to the bacterial host and then injecting the viral genome into the cell.

  7. Bacteriophage MS2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacteriophage_MS2

    An MS2 virion (viral particle) is about 27 nm in diameter, as determined by electron microscopy. [4] It consists of one copy of the maturation protein and 180 copies of the coat protein (organized as 90 dimers ) arranged into an icosahedral shell with triangulation number T=3 , protecting the genomic RNA inside. [ 5 ]

  8. Phi X 174 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phi_X_174

    Structure of phage ΦX174 capsid Schematic drawing of a Sins­heimer­virus (aka Phix174­micro­virus) virion. The phi X 174 (or ΦX174) bacteriophage is a single-stranded DNA virus that infects Escherichia coli.

  9. Filamentous bacteriophage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filamentous_bacteriophage

    Assembled major coat protein subunits in Ff (fd, f1, M13) filamentous bacteriophage (genus Inovirus), exploded view. Filamentous phage virion--schematic views. Filamentous bacteriophages are among the simplest living organisms known, with far fewer genes than the classical tailed bacteriophages studied by the phage group in the mid-20th century.