Ask Question
15 February, 07:32

Bacterial cells were coinfected with two types of bacteriophage lambda: One carried the c + allele and the other the c allele. After the cells lysed, progeny bacteriophage were collected. When a single such progeny bacteriophage was used to infect a new bacterial cell, it was observed in rare cases that some of the resulting progeny were c + and others were c. Explain this result.

+4
Answers (1)
  1. 15 February, 07:50
    0
    Since the cells are being coinfected by 2 types of viruses, this can create heteroduplex areas. DNA repair systems normally correct the heteroduplex areas. In rare cases, the heteroduplex is not corrected and a chromosome containing the mismatch appears so a single bacteriophage particle can be generated. One DNA strand is c+, and the other strand is c. When such a bacteriophage infects a fresh bacterial host cell, some molecules are created by DNA replication.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “Bacterial cells were coinfected with two types of bacteriophage lambda: One carried the c + allele and the other the c allele. After the ...” in 📗 Biology if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers