(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kathleen Haughney
khaughney@fsu.edu
850-644-1489
Florida State University
Bacteria-invading virus yields new discoveries
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Innovative work by two Florida State University scientists that shows the structural and DNA breakdown of a bacteria-invading virus is being featured on the cover of the February issue of the journal Virology.
Kathryn Jones and Elizabeth Stroupe, both assistant professors in the Department of Biological Science, have deconstructed a type of virus called a bacteriophage, which infects bacteria. Their work will help researchers in the future have a better understanding of how the virus invades and impacts bacteria, and could be particularly useful for the agriculture industry.
"It turns out there are a lot of novel things about it," Jones said.
Until now, there was little known about this particular bacteriophage, called the ?M12, which infects a nitrogen-fixing bacterium called Sinorhizobium meliloti.
Jones focused on the sequencing the DNA of ?M12 and analyzing its evolutionary context, while Stroupe looked at its overall physical structure.
"The bacteriophage is really just a tool for studying the bacterium," Stroupe said. "No one thought to sequence it before."
That tool, Stroupe said, will give scientists more insight into the basic functions of the ?M12 bacteriophage. ?M12 is the first reported bacteriophage to have its particular combination of DNA sequences and the particular shape of its protein shell. Understanding both the DNA and structure can provide an understanding of the proteins a bacteriophage produces and how it chooses the bacteria it invades.
In the case of ?M12, this could be particularly useful in the future for the agriculture community and seed companies. Important crop plants depend on biological nitrogen fixation by the bacteria that is preyed upon by this phage. Nitrogen fixation is the process by which abundant nitrogen gas in the atmosphere is converted to the scarce soil resources ammonia and nitrate.
###
Jones and Stroupe's work, divided into two articles, will be featured on the cover of Virology. One, authored primarily by Jones and an undergraduate honors thesis student, Tess Brewer, focuses on the genetic makeup of the virus, while the other by Stroupe and colleagues, examines the physical structure.
Bacteria-invading virus yields new discoveries
2014-01-10
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
'Hip-hop' students unfairly targeted, study finds
2014-01-10
'Hip-hop' students unfairly targeted, study finds
EAST LANSING, Mich. - Black and Latino "hip-hop" students are disproportionately punished in urban schools, finds a two-year study that sheds light on some of the unfair disciplinary practices newly targeted by the Obama ...
Comprehensive, nonsurgical treatment improves pelvic floor dysfunction in women
2014-01-10
Comprehensive, nonsurgical treatment improves pelvic floor dysfunction in women
Women who completed therapy experienced significant improvement in urinary incontinence, defecatory dysfunction and pelvic pain
COLUMBIA, Mo. – One in three women suffer from pelvic ...
Mood stabilizing drug may help treat acute kidney injury
2014-01-10
Mood stabilizing drug may help treat acute kidney injury
A single dose of lithium helped restore kidney function in mice with acute kidney injury
Washington, DC (January 9, 2014) — A mood stabilizer used to treat bipolar affective disorders may also help treat acute kidney ...
Targeting certain kidney cells may help treat kidney failure
2014-01-10
Targeting certain kidney cells may help treat kidney failure
Cells cause destructive scarring that contributes to kidney function decline
Washington, DC (January 9, 2014) — New research reveals that certain cells contribute to kidney function decline, making them attractive ...
The human Y chromosome is not likely to disappear
2014-01-10
The human Y chromosome is not likely to disappear
Is the male Y chromosome at risk of being lost? Recent work by Dr Wilson Sayres and colleagues at UC Berkeley, published in PLOS Genetics, demonstrates that the genes on the Y chromosome are important: ...
Loss of large carnivores poses global conservation problem
2014-01-10
Loss of large carnivores poses global conservation problem
CORVALLIS, Ore. – In ecosystems around the world, the decline of large predators such as lions, dingoes, wolves, otters, and bears is changing the face of landscapes from the tropics to the Arctic ...
Capturing a hard-wired variability
2014-01-10
Capturing a hard-wired variability
Single cell analysis captures a genomic phenomenon that fuels the complexity and diversity of living things
January 09, 2013, New York, NY– A Ludwig Cancer Research study has uncovered a phenomenon that alters ...
Study dispels theories of Y chromosome's demise
2014-01-10
Study dispels theories of Y chromosome's demise
Stripped-down chromosome retains key genes for fertility
A comparison of Y chromosomes in eight African and eight European men dispels the common notion that the Y's genes are mostly unimportant and ...
Penn research helps lay out theory for metamaterials that act as an analog computer
2014-01-10
Penn research helps lay out theory for metamaterials that act as an analog computer
The field of metamaterials has produced structures with unprecedented abilities, including flat lenses, invisibility cloaks and even optical "metatronic" devices that can manipulate ...
Moderate coffee consumption does not lead to dehydration
2014-01-10
Moderate coffee consumption does not lead to dehydration
Researchers dispel the myth that coffee consumption can cause dehydration
New research(1), published today in the PLOS ONE, has found no evidence for a link between moderate coffee consumption and dehydration. The ...