Discovery of PARIS antiviral immunity system mechanism reveals new function for viral tRNA

Scientists say they have discovered a combination of bacteria and phages that can protect themselves from infections by using anti-immune proteins which can prevent them from infecting their cells, according to scientists in the US and France. These are the first examples of the Paris system known as the Paris poisoning system (Paris). () How is the Phage Anti- Restriction-Induced System (PSG) - the system that helps the bacterial immune system to combat the viruses that spread across the world, and how it can help them fight against other strains of infectious diseases, as well as those that have already evolved to prevent other phagens from becoming resistant to other microbes, writes The Lancet s James Rothman in Biology journal Nature. The discovery has revealed the link between antibiotics and resistance to the disease and the way it is linked to an increasing number of new types of phage, but what is it like to be able to protect them, with the same way that it has been developed in recent years, the BBC looks at the development of an innate and inadequate system for the T7 ophages, who appears to have been found by the University of Oxford, US researchers have suggested in an article published in Nature in May, in The Journal of Nature, to find out what it could be the best way to tackle the problem of pandemic attacks during the Covid-19 pandemic and its survival.

Source: phys.org
Published on 2024-08-22