Major discoveries made with bacteriophages
[Division M is composed of researchers and teachers dedicated to the study of bacterial viruses]
• plaque assay ( D'Herelle 1917ff, Gratia 1936, Hershey, Kalmanson & Bronfenbrenner, 1943)
• nature of a virus life cycle (one-step growth experiment: Ellis & Delbrück 1939, eclipse— phage T4: Doermann 1948,
• nature and types of genetic mutations (phage T1: the Luria & Delbrück fluctuation test (1) (2) 1943; Hershey & Luria, 1945) intracellular assembly— phage T2: Kellenberger 1962)
• confirmation that genes are made of DNA (phage T2: Hershey & Chase experiment, 1952)
• virus-mediated gene transfer between cells (now called “gene therapy” — phage P22, Zinder 1953)
• restriction and modification (phage
• co-linearity of gene and protein (phage T4: Benzer, 1959)
• messenger RNA (phage T4: Brenner, Jacob, & Meselson, 1961)
• single-stranded DNA genome (phage
• the nature of the genetic code (phage T4: Crick, Barnett, Brenner, & Watts-Tobin, 1961)
• physical nature of genetic recombination (phage
• chemical nature (protein) and mode of action (DNA binding) of a transcription factor (phage
• site-specific recombination (phage
• DNA ligase (phage
• important features of the mechanism of DNA replication (phage
phage T4— Okazaki fragments: Okazaki & Okazaki 1969;
phage M13— RNA primers: Brutlag, Schekman, & Kornberg 1971;
phage T7— visualization: Dressler, Magazin, & Wolfson 1972, completing ends of linear molecules: Watson 1972)
• anti-termination as a mechanism of transcriptional regulation (
• SDS-PAGE (
• DNA cloning (phage
• chaperonins (phage
• characterization of insertion sequences& transposons (
• overlapping genes (phage
• retroregulation as a mechanism of translational regulation (
• luciferase reporter phages for medical diagnostics (mycobacteriophages: Jacobs,
http://www.asm.org/division/m/blurbs/Secrets.html