Publications by authors named "Charles M Bridges"

Article Synopsis
  • Tupanviruses are a type of virus that infect special cells in the immune system called phagocytes.
  • Scientists discovered how certain metal ions and hydrogen peroxide can cause these viruses to open up in a specific way.
  • This opening might release the part of the virus that is needed to start an infection, making the treated viruses no longer able to infect cells.
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Many temperate phages encode prophage-expressed functions that interfere with superinfection of the host bacterium by external phages. phage P22 has four such systems that are expressed from the prophage in a lysogen that are encoded by the (repressor), , , and genes. Here we report that the P22-encoded SieA protein is necessary and sufficient for exclusion by the SieA system and that it is an inner membrane protein that blocks DNA injection by P22 and its relatives, but has no effect on infection by other tailed phage types.

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Many temperate phages encode prophage-expressed functions that interfere with superinfection of the host bacterium by external phages. phage P22 has four such systems that are expressed from the prophage in a lysogen that are encoded by the (repressor), , , and genes. Here we report that the P22-encoded SieA protein is the only phage protein required for exclusion by the SieA system, and that it is an inner membrane protein that blocks DNA injection by P22 and its relatives, but has no effect on infection by other tailed phage types.

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The rhizosphere is the region of soil directly influenced by plant roots. The microbial community in the rhizosphere includes fungi, protists, and bacteria: all play significant roles in plant health. The beneficial bacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti infects growing root hairs on nitrogen-starved leguminous plants.

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species are facultative heterotrophs capable of growth on lignocellulose-derived polysaccharides. species harbor myriad genes involved in glycan modification and are well suited to the lignocellulose-rich conditions within the termite hindgut. Here, we report draft genome sequences for sp.

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spp. are facultative heterotrophs which colonize diverse environments, including the hindgut of the lower termite genomes are enriched for genes involving oligo- and polysaccharide utilization, enabling modification of a wide array of complex glycans. Here, we report draft genome sequences for sp.

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Microorganisms play a vital role in shaping the soil environment and enhancing plant growth by interacting with plant root systems. Because of the vast diversity of cell types involved, combined with dynamic and spatial heterogeneity, identifying the causal contribution of a defined factor, such as a microbial exopolysaccharide (EPS), remains elusive. Synthetic approaches that enable orthogonal control of microbial pathways are a promising means to dissect such complexity.

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Members of Dysgonomonas are Gram-stain-negative, non-motile, facultatively anaerobic coccobacilli originally described in relation to their isolation from stool and wounds of human patients (CDC group DF-3). More recently, Dysgonomonas have been found to be widely distributed in terrestrial environments and are particularly enriched in insect systems. Their prevalence in xylophagous insects such as termites and wood-feeding cockroaches, as well as in soil-fed microbial fuel cells, elicit interest in lignocellulose degradation and biofuel production, respectively.

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