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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: discovered + bacteria + bacterium  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Bacteria were the real killers in 1918 flu pandemic
New Scientist (subscription), UK -
Medical and scientific experts now agree that bacteria, not influenza viruses, were the greatest cause of death during the 1918 flu pandemic. ...
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Adelaide scientist finds bacteria that eats polluted soil NEWS.com.au
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all 46 news articles »

Smithsonian
T. rex Protein Was Mere Bacterial Goop?
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Studying fossils of 17 dinosaur and mammal species, Kaye and his team saw evidence of biofilms, or slime left behind by bacteria that grew on the bone long ...
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Bacteria simply grows within the system. While the bacteria was discovered in the Eastwood Heights reservoir, Harding explained, the chlorine is added at ...
Residents urged caution eating cold noodles
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The silver nanoparticles in socks and lining the inside of some washing machines do a good job of killing bacteria, but they apparently don't stay there. ...
How Some Bacteria May Steal Iron From Their Human Hosts
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 31, 2008
A Syracuse University research team led by Robert Doyle, assistant professor of chemistry in The College of Arts and Sciences, discovered that some bacteria ...

Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (press release)
Plant Genetic Transformation Mechanisms Emerge
Cooperative State Research, Education, and Extension Service (press release), DC -
Scientists are unlocking the process of how bacteria transfer genetic material into the plant genome. This information may lead to crop plants with improved ...
Source: Google News

… of a mevalonate-independent pathway for isoprenoid biosynthesis in bacteria, algae and higher … -
M Rohmer, M Rohmer - Natural Product Reports, 1999 - rsc.org
... C labeled acetate was later performed with Escherichia coli, a bacterium producing
no ... previously found in the hopanoids from the former bacteria, indicating a ...

Aerobic Anoxygenic Phototrophic Bacteria -
VV Yurkov, JT Beatty - Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, 1998 - Am Soc Microbiol
... a relatively recently discovered bacterial group ... aerobic, bacteriochlorophyll-containing
bacterium isolated from ... Aerobic Anoxygenic Phototrophic Bacteria in the ...

Diversity and association of psychrophilic bacteria in Antarctic sea ice -
JP Bowman, SA McCammon, MV Brown, DS Nichols, TA … - Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 1997 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... the fusiform caulobacters: members of a recently discovered division of the bacteria. ...
a psychrophilic, marine, gas vacuolate bacterium from Antarctica ...

Chemotaxis in Bacteria -
J Adler - Annual Reviews in Biochemistry, 1975 - Annual Reviews
... discovered nearly a century ago by Engelmann (1) and ... before has led to the proposal
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The predominant role of recently discovered tetrahydropyrimidines for the osmoadaptation of … -
J SEVERIN, A WOHLFARTH, EA GALINSLKI - JGM. Journal of general microbiology, 1992 - cat.inist.fr
... organisms were two recently discovered tetrahydropyrimidines ectoine ... spectrometry;
Espectrometr?a RMN; Bact?rie; Bacteria; Bacteria; Pyrimidine (t?trahydro ...

The complete general secretory pathway in gram-negative bacteria. -
AP Pugsley - Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, 1993 - mmbr.highwire.org
... This recently discovered branch pathway comprises at least ... used by gram-negative
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Optical trapping and manipulation of viruses and bacteria -
A Ashkin, JM Dziedzic - Science, 1987 - sciencemag.org
... Optcal Trapping and Manipulation of Viruses and Bacteria ... Optical trapping and
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… a New Tetracycline Resistance Determinant Discovered in Gram-Positive Bacteria, Shows High Homology … -
A Tauch, A P?hler, J Kalinowski, G Thierbach - Plasmid, 2000 - Elsevier
... a New Tetracycline Resistance Determinant Discovered in Gram-Positive Bacteria,
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Acyl-homoserine lactone quorum sensing in Gram-negative bacteria: A signaling mechanism involved in … -
MR Parsek, EP Greenberg - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the …, 2000 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... negative bacteria that interact with plant and animal hosts. Quorum sensing was
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… (Ciliophora) that contain microtubule-like structures are bacteria related to Verrucomicrobia -
G Petroni, S Spring, KH Schleifer, F Verni, G … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the …, 2000 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... are the R bodies of Caedibacter teniospiralis, the bacterium that confers ... related
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Source: Google Scholar
 

Scientists discover rare ‘gene-for-gene’ interaction that helps bacteria kill their host

Scientists have discovered that a cousin of the plague bacterium uses a single gene to out-fox insect immune defences and kill its host.

In research published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, scientists have found that Photorhabdus bacteria produce an antibiotic which inhibits the work of an enzyme that insects’ immune systems use to defend themselves from attack.

Although such so-called gene-for-gene interactions are thought to be common in diseases, very few examples of a single gene in a pathogen targeting a single gene in an animal or human host have been identified so far.

Photorhabdus is a family of bacteria that in relatively small concentrations can kill insects - between 10-100 cells of it are typically enough – but most are harmless to humans and can be used as a biological control mechanism to replace pesticide use.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The researchers, from the universities of Bath, Bristol and Exeter, all in the UK, used the large caterpillar Manduca sexta (tobacco hornworm) to study the bacteria’s so-called virulence genes.

“The beauty of this research is that we have been able to study the whole genome of the bacteria to work out how it kills its host,” said Professor Stuart Reynolds from the University of Bath.

“People studying diseases think that the kind of gene-for-gene interaction between pathogen and host that we have found is quite common, but actually rather few are known, which is why this research is so interesting.

“The immune systems of all animals, even relatively simple ones like insects, are all very similar.

“This is particularly true of the innate immune system, which is the fast-acting battery of defences that recognise and kill microbes to prevent infections from occurring.

“Some remarkable discoveries have been made using insects that have subsequently allowed important advances in understanding how the human immune system works.”

As part of their innate immune system, insects use an enzyme called phenoloxidase to produce reactive molecules that kill bacteria and then encapsulate them in a dense coat of black pigment called melanin.

The researchers found that Photorhabdus produces a special phenoloxidase inhibitor to protect itself against this particular defence.

They identified the inhibitor as a small molecule called 1,3-dihydroxy-2-(isopropyl)-5-(2-phenylethenyl)benzene, known as ST for short.

This molecule is also an antibiotic and Photorhabdus produces it to kill off other microbes that might grow in the corpse of the dead insect.

To test their findings, the researchers produced a mutant Photorhabdus that is unable to make ST. Without ST, the bacteria were less virulent. The researchers then used a technique known RNA interference to prevent the insects from producing the phenoloxidase enzyme. These insects were more susceptible to regular Photorhabdus bacteria.

But when the two were combined, it was found that not being able to produce ST made no difference to Photorhabdus when colonising insects unable to produce phenoloxidase.

“This is conclusive evidence for a gene-for-gene interaction between the bacterium and the insect,” said Richard ffrench-Constant (correct) of Exeter University.

Photorhabdus is an important biocontrol organism that is used to control insect pests and reduces pesticide use, so the more we know about it, the more useful it can be.

“Insects are the major players in almost every ecosystem on the planet, so we need to know as much as we can about them.”

The research was supported through the Exploiting Genomics initiative funded by the Biotechnology & Biological Sciences Research Council (UK).

Source: ‘An antibiotic produced by an insect-pathogenic bacterium suppresses host defenses through phenoloxidase inhibition,’ Ioannis Eleftherianos, Sam Boundy, Susan A. Joyce, Shazia Aslam, James W. Marshall, Russell J. Cox, Thomas J. Simpson, David J. Clarke, Richard H. ffrench-Constant, and Stuart E. Reynolds, PNAS 2007 104: 2419-2424.

The University of Bath is one of the UK's leading universities, with an international reputation for quality research and teaching. In 16 subject areas the University of Bath is rated in the top ten in the country. View a full list of the University's press releases: http://www.bath.ac.uk/news/releases

 
 
 
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