Abstract
When F+ donor cells of Escherichia coli are conjugated with F-, F+, or Hfr recipients under the conditions of phenocopy mating, the male recipients are found capable of accepting the F episome as effectively as the F- recipients. The F deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) superinfected into the male recipients is converted to the covalently closed, circular duplex form, as in the F- recipients. It is also found that the synthesis of the strand complementary to the transferred single strand and its subsequent conversion to the covalently closed, circular duplex occur effectively in male recipients as well as in female recipients. Under these mating conditions, F-ilv+ episome superinfected to F+ and Hfr cells is diluted out during growth, whereas F-ilv+ transferred into F-cells is replicated and established in almost all progeny cells. These results suggest that the incompatibility of the F episome is not due to the reduction in the rate of the conversion of transferred single-straned F DNA to covalently closed, circular duplex, but, rather, to an inhibition of further replication of the covalently closed, circular F DNA.
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