Quorum sensing; fights viral infections (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Sunday, November 20, 2016, 00:30 (2926 days ago) @ David Turell

Bacteria in large communities use quorum sensing and gene modification to protect themselves against infection by viruses:

http://phys.org/news/2016-11-bacteria-ramp-immune-response-viral.html

"Bacteria can boost their own immune systems by "talking" to each other, surprising new research from New Zealand's University of Otago shows.

"People have long understood the advantages of living in communities and bacteria are no different, often residing in close quarters to share resources. However, there are also potential drawbacks to community life as high-density bacterial populations are more vulnerable to the spread of viruses - just like people in a crowded bus or a daycare centre," he says.

"The breakthrough came when the researchers discovered that the ability of bacteria to gauge the number of cells in their communities enabled the bacteria to boost the power of their CRISPR-Cas immune systems to prevent viral outbreaks.

"Associate Professor Fineran says the bacteria sense the population density by "talking" to each other using a form of chemical communication known as quorum sensing.

"'The higher the population density, the stronger the communication between cells becomes, which results in greater coordination of immune defenses," he says.
Adrian Patterson, a PhD student and first author on the paper, says the study shows that bacterial cells preemptively elevate their immunity when they are most at risk of a virus spreading through the population.

"'They both increase their ability to generate new immune memories and strengthen existing immunity by up to 500-fold," Mr Patterson says.

"The role of CRISPR-Cas in providing bacteria with viral immunity was only discovered in the past decade.

"The systems create genetic memories of specific past viral infections by taking little snippets of the viruses' DNA and storing them in memory banks to aid in recognising and destroying future infections.

"One of the least understood aspects of the CRISPR-Cas field is how bacteria control the activity of these systems. Too much activity can result in an autoimmune-like disease, killing the host cell, but too little activity might allow viruses to wipe out entire bacterial communities. The team's research shows that by openly communicating with each other, bacteria strike the right balance between these two outcomes."

Comment: Quorum sensing occurs as bacteria gather in numbers and sense chemicals from each other. In this case the CRISPR-Cas mechanisms modifies the DNA to accept info about previous viral attacks. This is exactly as Shapiro would predict they do, modifying DNA to respond to stimuli.


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