Virus-Cutting Enzyme Helps Bacteria Remember a Threat

Bacteria may not have brains, but they do have memories, at least when it comes to viruses that attack them. Many bacteria have a molecular immune system which allows these microbes to capture and retain pieces of viral DNA that they have encountered in the past, in order to recognize and destroy it when it shows up again.

Written byThe Rockefeller University
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Research at Rockefeller University described Wednesday (February 18) in Nature offers new insight into the mysterious process by which this system works to encode viral DNA in a microbe’s genome for later use as guides for virus-cutting enzymes.

“Microbes, like vertebrates, have immune systems capable of adapting to new threats. Cas9, one enzyme employed by these systems, uses immunological memories to guide cuts to viral genetic code. However, very little is known about how these memories are acquired in the first place,” says Assistant Professor Luciano Marraffini, head of the Laboratory of Bacteriology. “Our work shows that Cas9 also directs the formation of these memories among certain bacteria.”

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