Bacteriophages are a type of virus that prey upon bacterial cells. The reproduction of bacteriophages always involves death of the infected bacterium, when the viruses burst out or lyse their prokaryotic host cell.
But sometimes the viral genetic material remains hidden and inactive in the bacterial DNA, allowing the host to reproduce. Each time the infected bacterium duplicates its DNA (nucleic acid) and divides, it also creates another copy of the viral nucleic acid; a very sneaky and effective tactic for creating a huge number viruses from one initially infected bacterial cell.
All viruses, both bacteriophages and animal virions, reproduce via three basic steps:
These steps are just a general outline of the events of viral replication. The details of each of these steps vary among different types of viruses.
A bacteriophage, also known as simply a phage, reproduces specifically via lytic replication, a type of viral replication that ultimately kills the infected bacterial cell. The five stages of the lytic cycle are as follows:
Sometimes, after a phage enters its host cell it does not destroy the host's DNA and the phage’s genome does not immediately take control of the cell. Instead the viral DNA is inserted into the bacterial chromosome, but virus remains inactive. In this state, the virus is called a prophage and the mode of reproduction is called lysogeny.
The prophage remains inactive by coding for a protein that suppresses the viral genes. A side effect of this suppression is that it renders the bacterium resistant to additional infection by other viruses of the same type. In effect, the prophage is claiming its territory.
At some later time, the viral DNA is reactivated, by being excised (cut) from the host’s genome. External factors that cause induction are typically the same physical and chemical agents that damage DNA molecules, such as UV light, X-rays and carcinogenic chemicals.
See the science education websites Science Prof Online or Adopt a Microbe for more microbiology information.
Bauman, R. (2005) Microbiology.
Park Talaro, K. (2008) Foundations in Microbiology.