endolysis
Endolysis refers to the lysis of a bacterial cell driven by endolysins, enzymes encoded by bacteriophages during the lytic cycle. The term is used mainly in phage biology and microbiology to describe lysis from within the cell as opposed to external disruption by phages or chemical agents. Endolysis is a key step in phage replication, enabling release of progeny virions.
Mechanism: During infection, a phage’s late genes express endolysin, a peptidoglycan-degrading enzyme. The phage-encoded holin proteins
Scope and applications: Endolysins have been studied as therapeutic enzymes, sometimes called enzybiotics, aimed at treating
Terminology: Endolysis is sometimes used interchangeably with endolysin-mediated lysis, but literature commonly distinguishes the enzyme (endolysin)