Phys.org on MSN17 天
Phages love to kill bacteria. Could they be used as antibiotics?Phages are viruses that attack bacteria by injecting their DNA, then usurping bacterial machinery to reproduce. Eventually, they make so many copies of themselves that the bacteria burst.
Meet the jumbo phage. Scientists believe they’ve cracked the code on how its ‘secret handshakes’ act as a shield against the ...
The interaction between Imp1 and a protein ... Then the human uses a phage to kill the bacteria. But bacteria are quick to evolve new defenses. Once they have devised a way to get past the ...
Jumbo phages utilize a complex protein import system, with Imp1 as a key gatekeeper, to transport proteins into their ...
Thousands of treated patients support the potential of phage therapy, but limited knowledge of this technique and its regulatory complexity hinder its expansion ...
“Many of these bacterial systems have been shown to be the evolutionary origin of different ... Hör said that Bil’s conjugation to the spike protein likely inhibits the interaction between the phage ...
She added, “Phages, in the grand scheme of biology, are one of the least understood aspects of microbiology.” To better understand phage-bacteria interactions, the researchers returned to their ...
Moreover, we are interested in how the rapid evolution of species interactions might feedback and change the composition, stability and functioning of microbial ecosystems and host-associated ...
plays a critical role in replication (e.g., retroviruses, that reverse transcribe RNA templates into complementary DNA) and genome mutations (e.g., diversity-generating retroelements in ...
一些您可能无法访问的结果已被隐去。
显示无法访问的结果