The F-plasmid (first named F by one of its discoverers Esther Lederberg;also called the sex factor in E. coli,the F sex factor, or the fertility factor)[1][2][3] allows genes to be transferred from one bacterium carrying the factor to another bacterium lacking the factor by conjugation. The F factor was the first plasmid to be discovered. Unlike other plasmids, F factor is constitutive for transfer proteins due to a mutation in the gene finO.[4] The F plasmid belongs to F-like plasmids, a class of conjugative plasmids that control sexual functions of bacteria with a fertility inhibition (Fin) system.[5]
^Dugger, Gordon (1976). A dictionary of life sciences. (London [usw.]): Macmillan). p. 130. ISBN978-0333194362.
^Hine, Robert (2008). A dictionary of biology (6th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 592. ISBN9780199204625.