Abstract
A total of 33 Rhizobium meliloti bacteriophages were studied. Of those, 21 were isolated in northern France from field soil in which Medicago sativa L. was grown. The other 12 phages were obtained by UV light and mitomycin C induction from 46 R. meliloti strains. Rhizobiophages were characterized by their morphology, host range, serological properties, restriction endonuclease patterns, DNA-DNA homologies, and DNA molecular weights. Five morphotypes were observed showing tailed phages with icosahedral heads. The categories of morphotypes included the Myoviridae (11 phages), Siphoviridae (3 morphotypes and 20 phages), and Podoviridae (2 phages). Type NM1 phage (Siphoviridae) is highly unusual because of the presence of transverse bars on the phage tail. Soil phages had broad host ranges, whereas phages isolated from bacterial cultures showed more or less narrow host ranges. Restriction endonuclease patterns and DNA-DNA hybridization experiments showed that the five phage type genomes were unrelated. Molecular weights of phage type DNAs were estimated, and they corresponded to values expected for capsid sizes, except for phage NM8. Type phiM11S (Siphoviridae) did not correspond to any other described Rhizobium phages and represents a new species.
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