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J Bacteriol. 1963 October; 86(4): 773-780
Copyright © 1963, The Williams & Wilkins Company. All Rights Reserved.

EFFECT OF SODIUM CHLORIDE ON STAPHYLOCOCCUS-PHAGE RELATIONSHIPS

B. West1, Florene C. Kelly and Doris A. Shields

a Department of Microbiology, University of Oklahoma Medical Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma

ABSTRACT

WEST, B. (University of Oklahoma Medical Center, Oklahoma City), FLORENE C. KELLY, AND DORIS A. SHIELDS. Effect of sodium chloride on staphylococcus-phage relationships. J. Bacteriol. 86:773–780. 1963.—Phage patterns of 21 phage-propagating strains of staphylococci on medium with high NaCl content appeared to be an expression of the staphylococcal cells, as well as of the salt tolerance of the phages. Serological group A phages, previously found to be NaCl-tolerant in the free state, were capable of lysing susceptible staphylococci on 3, 7.5, and 10% NaCl Trypticase Soy Agar. None of the other phages tested was active when the medium contained 7.5 and 10% NaCl. Increasing the NaCl content of the medium rarely resulted in nonspecific reactions; rather the effect was, generally, a narrowing of the phage spectrum of the cells, with persistence in the phage pattern of the phage, or phages, which were propagated on the cells being tested. Although NaCl tolerance of the phages was the chief limiting factor of phage activity in the presence of 7.5 and 10% NaCl, reactions on salt medium also depended on the degree of susceptibility of cells to phage on routine typing medium and to certain other unexplained factors. In some instances, under the influence of increased NaCl, significant lysis at 1000 RTD was replaced by thinning of growth (inhibition), with or without the presence of plaques. Conversely, certain phage-cell combinations, which gave inhibition at 1000 RTD on standard medium produced some degree of lysis when the NaCl concentration was increased. Studies of phage 81 and its propagating strain showed that replication of phage occurred in 10% NaCl medium, although adsorption diminished as salt concentration was increased, and the time required to reach maximal lytic activity was delayed.


FOOTNOTES

1 Present address: Communicable Disease Center, U.S. Public Health Service, Atlanta, Ga.


J Bacteriol. 1963 October; 86(4): 773-780
Copyright © 1963, The Williams & Wilkins Company. All Rights Reserved.







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