scilearner Posted October 8, 2009 Share Posted October 8, 2009 In bacterial transduction bacteriophages contain DNA from other bacteria and infect other cells. My question is how can this occur because afer bacteriophage infects a bacteria it would die. So even if it got new bacterial DNA it would still die. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CharonY Posted October 8, 2009 Share Posted October 8, 2009 Note that bacteriophages can only pack a limited amount of DNA. If they accidentally put host DNA into their capsids, they lose some of their own. So if they infect the new cell they inject their original host's DNA instead of their own. Without their own DNA, however, they cannot hijack their new host's cellular functions. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scilearner Posted October 8, 2009 Author Share Posted October 8, 2009 Note that bacteriophages can only pack a limited amount of DNA. If they accidentally put host DNA into their capsids, they lose some of their own. So if they infect the new cell they inject their original host's DNA instead of their own. Without their own DNA, however, they cannot hijack their new host's cellular functions. Thank you for the nice precise answer One question though, in general transduction the dna goes in to the capsid not the viral genome so wouldn't the bacteriophage still have its viral genome in this case. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
GDG Posted October 8, 2009 Share Posted October 8, 2009 The Wikipedia entry on Transduction should answer your questions in detail. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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