Abstract

Temperate phages were induced from Streptococcus cremoris R(1), BK(5), and 134. DNA from the three induced phages was shown to be homologous with prophage DNA in the bacterial chromosomes of their lysogenic hosts by the Southern blot hybridization technique. P-labeled DNA from 11 lytic phages which had been isolated on cheese starters was similarly hybridized with DNA from 36 strains of lactic streptococci. No significant homology was detected between the phage and bacterial DNA. Phages and lactic streptococci used included phages isolated in a recently opened cheese plant and all the starter strains used in the plant since it commenced operation. The three temperate phages were compared by DNA-DNA hybridizations with 25 lytic phages isolated on cheese starters. Little or no homology was found between DNA from the temperate and lytic phages. In contrast, temperate phages showed a partial relationship with one another. Temperate phage DNA also showed partial homology with DNA from a number of strains of lactic streptococci, many of which have been shown to be lysogenic. This suggests that many temperate phages in lactic streptococci may be related to one another and therefore may be homoimmune with one another. These findings indicate that the release of temperate phages from starter cells currently in use is unlikely to be the predominant source of lytic phages in cheese plants.

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