The International Space Station (ISS) hovers 250 miles above us, orbiting Earth at 17,500 miles per hour. So far, it has welcomed nearly 300 astronauts. And now, this remote outpost also receives ...
Bacteria and the viruses that infect them are perpetually at war. Their deadly clashes push both kinds of microbes to evolve new traits that meet the challenges of every environment they inhabit, from ...
The International Space Station (ISS) is one of the most unique environments where life has ever existed, out in the low orbit of Earth. And research out today finds that bacteriophages—the viruses ...
Phages, viruses that attack bacteria, have a head and a tail. The head contains the phage's genetic material and the tail is used to identify a potential host, that is, a bacterial cell into which it ...
The microbial arms race, in which bacteria battle with each other, viruses, and other organisms for space and nutrients, has ...
Jumbo phages belong to a group of viruses that attack bacteria. They inject their DNA and then reproduce by taking over the cell’s DNA-copying machinery. Eventually, a phage makes so many copies of ...
The world didn't only just go through the COVID-19 pandemic, the seventh cholera pandemic is ongoing, and has been for some ...
Bacteria have an array of strategies to counter viral invasion, but how they first spot a stranger in their midst has long been a mystery. There's no organism on earth that lives free of threat -- ...
Gene-edited bacteriophages, or viruses that attack bacteria, can make potentially dangerous microbes in food and water glow so they are easier to detect. We have figured out a new way to send messages ...
Prof. Rotem Sorek and the Phages, viruses that attack bacteria. Phages, viruses that attack bacteria, have a head and a tail. The head contains the phage’s genetic material and the tail is used to ...
Viruses, like movie villains, operate in one of two ways: chill or kill. They can lie low, quietly infiltrating the body’s defenses, or go on the attack, making many copies of themselves that explode ...