Specialized transduction specifics Specialized (restricted) transduction by bacteriophages occurs under which genomic integration condition?

Difficulty: Easy

Correct Answer: The bacteriophage always incorporates at the same position in the bacterial chromosome

Explanation:


Introduction / Context:
Transduction transfers bacterial genes via phages. Specialized transduction is limited to genes adjacent to a prophage that integrates at a specific chromosomal site (e.g., lambda at attB in E. coli).



Given Data / Assumptions:

  • Lysogenic cycle involves site-specific integration.
  • Excision errors can co-mobilize neighboring host DNA.
  • Resulting phage carries restricted sets of host genes.


Concept / Approach:
Because integration is site-specific, only genes near the attachment site are transduced upon imprecise excision, defining “specialized” transduction. In contrast, generalized transduction arises from random packaging.



Step-by-Step Solution:
Site-specific integration at att site.Abnormal excision captures adjacent host DNA.Packaging yields transducing particles with restricted gene content.



Verification / Alternative check:
Mapping of transduced markers shows tight linkage to integration sites, unlike generalized transduction.



Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Random integration (option a) describes transposons; “never integrates” (option b) contradicts lysogeny; immediate lysis (option e) describes lytic cycle, not specialized transduction.



Common Pitfalls:
Confusing specialized with generalized transduction; overlooking the role of site-specific recombinases.



Final Answer:
The bacteriophage always incorporates at the same position in the bacterial chromosome.

Discussion & Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!
Join Discussion