Mating bridge
A mating bridge, also known as a "conjugation bridge", is a connection between two bacterial cells that provides a passage way for DNA in bacterial conjugation.
A mating bridge is different from a sex pilus, which is a structure made by a F+ strain bacterium in bacterial conjugation. The pili (plural) act as attachment sites that promote the binding of bacteria to each other. In this way, an F+ strain makes physical contact with an Fā strain. Once contact is made, the pili shorten and thereby draw the donor and recipient cells closer together. A conjugation bridge is then formed between the two cells, which provides a passageway for DNA transfer.[1]
References
This article is issued from
Wikipedia.
The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike.
Additional terms may apply for the media files.