Arthrobacter phage Treenity
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Detailed Information for Phage Treenity
Discovery Information
Isolation HostArthrobacter atrocyaneus NRRL B-2883
Found ByTrinity Blanche
Year Found2024
Location FoundLockport, IL United States
Finding InstitutionBenedictine University
ProgramScience Education Alliance-Phage Hunters Advancing Genomics and Evolutionary Science
From enriched soil sample?No
Isolation Temperature22°C
GPS Coordinates41.57668 N, 88.05225 W Map
Discovery NotesThe soil was wet and moist because the snow had just melted. It was easy to scoop up because it wasn’t dry, but this made me nervous when trying to figure out if it would work in the isolation section of this experiment. I used a spoon to dig up the oil from this patch, and I got about 2-3 inches deep before smoothing the patch out. The soil felt like a solid and liquid. It was hard to get around the rocks, but easy to obtain the soil once the big rocks were out of there.
Naming NotesI named this Treenity because the name Tree was taken. So I went and named it after myself with a twist so Treenity was born.
Sequencing Information
Sequencing Complete?No
Genome length (bp)Unknown
Character of genome endsUnknown
Fasta file available?No
Characterization
ClusterUnclustered
Subcluster--
Annotating InstitutionUnknown or unassigned
Annotation StatusNot sequenced
Plaque Notesplaque radius: 0.5mm
plaque diameter: 1mm

My phage had lytic properties. The diameter was 1mm and the radius was 0.5mm. Since my radius was smaller and the diameter was also small, it took a larger PFU/mL to make a webbed plate.
Has been Phamerated?No
Publication Info
Uploaded to GenBank?No
GenBank AccessionNone yet
Refseq NumberNone yet
Archiving Info
Archiving status Not in Pitt Archives
Available Files
Plaque PictureDownload
Restriction Digest PictureDownload