ADHESION PARTITIONING: INTRASOMATIC OBSERVATIONS ON NORMAL ESCHERICHIA COLI AND T2 BACTERIOPHAGE
Open Access
- 25 March 1955
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 1 (2) , 99-110
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.1.2.99
Abstract
Adhesion partitioning is a method for progressively dismantling small biological entities for observation of their internal structures. The method is particularly well suited to use with the electron microscope. Objects to be partitioned are air-dried between two preformed plastic films resulting in envelopment of the objects. On separating the films the objects are partitioned. Partitioned E. coli bacteria reveal a variety of structures which change markedly with culture age. Organisms from young cultures have a water-retaining gelatinous matrix in which radially striated discs, fabric-like structures, and microsomes are found. Older cultures are less anatomically complex. The T2 bacteriophage is shown to be composed of an outer limiting membrane and a cohesive semisolid fibrillar body substance, presumably nucleic acid, which can be drawn as a strand from the bacteriophage body.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- THE AMINO ACID COMPOSITION OF T3 BACTERIOPHAGEJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1953
- High-resolution electron micrographs of sections of E. coliBiochimica et Biophysica Acta, 1953
- Electron Microscopy of the Nucleic Acid Released from Individual Bacteriophage ParticlesProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1953
- SUBMICROSCOPIC CYTOPLASMIC GRANULES IN THE ANTERIOR LOBE CELLS OF THE RAT HYPOPHYSIS AS REVEALED BY ELECTRON MICROSCOPYActa Endocrinologica, 1949
- A Method of Sectioning Bacteria in situ for Electron-microscopical and Cytochemical InvestigationsNature, 1949