RECOMBINATION ANALYSIS OF BACTERIAL HEREDITY

  1. J. Lederberg,
  2. E. M. Lederberg,
  3. N. D. Zinder, and
  4. E. R. Lively
  1. Department of Genetics, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin

This extract was created in the absence of an abstract.

Excerpt

Five years ago, at this Symposium, E. L. Tatum and J. Lederberg first reported some preliminary experiments on genetic recombination in Escherichia coli K-12 (1946). This report will review subsequent developments in this research, with special emphasis on the application of recombination analysis in bacteria to problems of general genetic interest.

The standard textbooks of bacteriology have emphasized simple fission to the near exclusion of other modes of bacterial reproduction. This is not surprising in view of the confusing aggregate of conflicting and unconfirmed claims of morphological observations interpreted as sexual processes (reviewed by Bisset, 1950). More authoritative claims of bacterial fusion have appeared (Braun and Elrod, 1946; Stempen and Hutchinson, 1951) but none with the essential concurrence of genetic investigation. On the other hand, as we shall see, there is so far no satisfactory demonstration of the morphological basis of genetic interchange in E. coli, but the convergence of...

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