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. 2021 Sep 15;11(9):210188. doi: 10.1098/rsob.210188

Table 1.

Proposed properties of phage infection strategies.

phage infection strategya,b
detection methods
single-cell level
population level
property lytic infection productive, chronic infection non-productive, chronic infection lysogeny, integrated prophage lysogeny, non-integrated prophage pseudolysogeny carrier state infection
production of viral particles + + +d + plaque assay; analysis of the presence of particles; imaging
progeny release by cell lysis + + one-step growth assay; imaging
progeny release by budding or extrusion + + one-step growth assay; imaging
no progeny release + + + + plaque assay from the supernatant (lack of particles in the supernatant)
episome ±c + + + sequencing
genome integration ±c + Southern blot of electrophoresis-separated cellular DNAs; sequencing
inducible ± n.d. + + physical or chemical induction
asymmetric division of the episomes + single-cell PCR; single-cell imaging
mix of sensitive and resistant bacteria + analysis of viral sensitivity

aPlus sign indicates the possible presence of the infection property in the phage life cycle strategy, whereas minus sign indicates the lack of that specific attribute.

bSuperinfection exclusion can be a property of any of the phage infection strategies (not necessarily in all cells of the infected population).

cPhages displaying productive, chronic infection either replicate episomally or integrate into the host genome.

dIn non-productive, chronic infection progeny phage particles are produced within the host cell without lysis.