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Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Natural GMOs Part 280. How An Antibiotic Gene Jumped All Over The Tree of Life

A Great NatGeo 2014 article by the superb Ed Yong:

EVERY LIVING THING on the planet has to contend with bacteria. To many viruses, they are prey. To other bacteria, they are competitors. To animals and plants, they can be the cause of devastating diseases or beneficial partners that provide everything from nutrition to immunity to light. They have been around for some 3 billion years, and they are everywhere. So, it makes sense that a gene which allows its owners to deal with bacteria might find a home throughout the entire tree of life.

That’s what Jason Metcalf and colleagues from Vanderbilt University have now discovered. They tracked a gene called GH25-muramidase, which makes an enzyme that can break apart a bacterium’s outer wall. It’s common in bacteria, which use it to remodel themselves and reproduce by dividing in two. But Metcalf showed that it has also jumped from bacteria into every other major branch of life. It’s in animals, plants, fungi, archaea, and even some viruses....


H/T to Val Giddings on Twitter

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