AbstractWe examine in vivo ejection of noncondensed DNA from tailed bacteriophages into bacteria. The ejection is dominantly governed by the physical conditions in the bacteria. The confinement of the DNA in the virus capsid only slightly helps the ejection, becoming completely irrelevant during its last stages. A simple calculation based on the premise of condensed DNA in the cell enables us to estimate the maximal bacterial turgor pressure against which the ejection can still be fully realized. The calculated pressure (∼5 atm) shows that the ejection of DNA into Gram-negative bacteria could proceed spontaneously, i.e., without the need to invoke active mechanisms
Sixty years after Hershey and Chase showed that nucleic acid is the major component of phage particl...
* These authors contributed equally to this work. We study the control parameters that govern the dy...
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-enc...
AbstractWe examine in vivo ejection of noncondensed DNA from tailed bacteriophages into bacteria. Th...
We have recently demonstrated, that DNA ejection from bacteriophage I can be partially or completely...
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-enc...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-enc...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
Recent in vitro experiments have shown that DNA ejection from bacteriophage can be partially stopped...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
Sixty years after Hershey and Chase showed that nucleic acid is the major component of phage particl...
Sixty years after Hershey and Chase showed that nucleic acid is the major component of phage particl...
Sixty years after Hershey and Chase showed that nucleic acid is the major component of phage particl...
* These authors contributed equally to this work. We study the control parameters that govern the dy...
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-enc...
AbstractWe examine in vivo ejection of noncondensed DNA from tailed bacteriophages into bacteria. Th...
We have recently demonstrated, that DNA ejection from bacteriophage I can be partially or completely...
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-enc...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-enc...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
Recent in vitro experiments have shown that DNA ejection from bacteriophage can be partially stopped...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
A critical step in the bacteriophage life cycle is genome ejection into host bacteria. The ejection ...
Sixty years after Hershey and Chase showed that nucleic acid is the major component of phage particl...
Sixty years after Hershey and Chase showed that nucleic acid is the major component of phage particl...
Sixty years after Hershey and Chase showed that nucleic acid is the major component of phage particl...
* These authors contributed equally to this work. We study the control parameters that govern the dy...
Biopolymer translocation is a key step in viral infection processes. The transfer of information-enc...