Literature DB >> 31695182

The pan-immune system of bacteria: antiviral defence as a community resource.

Aude Bernheim1, Rotem Sorek2.   

Abstract

Viruses and their hosts are engaged in a constant arms race leading to the evolution of antiviral defence mechanisms. Recent studies have revealed that the immune arsenal of bacteria against bacteriophages is much more diverse than previously envisioned. These discoveries have led to seemingly contradictory observations: on one hand, individual microorganisms often encode multiple distinct defence systems, some of which are acquired by horizontal gene transfer, alluding to their fitness benefit. On the other hand, defence systems are frequently lost from prokaryotic genomes on short evolutionary time scales, suggesting that they impose a fitness cost. In this Perspective article, we present the 'pan-immune system' model in which we suggest that, although a single strain cannot carry all possible defence systems owing to their burden on fitness, it can employ horizontal gene transfer to access immune defence mechanisms encoded by closely related strains. Thus, the 'effective' immune system is not the one encoded by the genome of a single microorganism but rather by its pan-genome, comprising the sum of all immune systems available for a microorganism to horizontally acquire and use.

Year:  2019        PMID: 31695182     DOI: 10.1038/s41579-019-0278-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol        ISSN: 1740-1526            Impact factor:   60.633


  78 in total

1.  The Rcs stress response inversely controls surface and CRISPR-Cas adaptive immunity to discriminate plasmids and phages.

Authors:  Leah M Smith; Simon A Jackson; Lucia M Malone; James E Ussher; Paul P Gardner; Peter C Fineran
Journal:  Nat Microbiol       Date:  2021-01-04       Impact factor: 17.745

Review 2.  Beyond horizontal gene transfer: the role of plasmids in bacterial evolution.

Authors:  Jerónimo Rodríguez-Beltrán; Javier DelaFuente; Ricardo León-Sampedro; R Craig MacLean; Álvaro San Millán
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2021-01-19       Impact factor: 60.633

3.  Prokaryotic viperins produce diverse antiviral molecules.

Authors:  Aude Bernheim; Adi Millman; Gal Ofir; Gilad Meitav; Carmel Avraham; Helena Shomar; Masha M Rosenberg; Nir Tal; Sarah Melamed; Gil Amitai; Rotem Sorek
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2020-09-16       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Diversity and classification of cyclic-oligonucleotide-based anti-phage signalling systems.

Authors:  Adi Millman; Sarah Melamed; Gil Amitai; Rotem Sorek
Journal:  Nat Microbiol       Date:  2020-08-24       Impact factor: 17.745

5.  Diverse enzymatic activities mediate antiviral immunity in prokaryotes.

Authors:  Linyi Gao; Han Altae-Tran; Francisca Böhning; Kira S Makarova; Michael Segel; Jonathan L Schmid-Burgk; Jeremy Koob; Yuri I Wolf; Eugene V Koonin; Feng Zhang
Journal:  Science       Date:  2020-08-28       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  High-throughput mapping of the phage resistance landscape in E. coli.

Authors:  Vivek K Mutalik; Benjamin A Adler; Harneet S Rishi; Denish Piya; Crystal Zhong; Britt Koskella; Elizabeth M Kutter; Richard Calendar; Pavel S Novichkov; Morgan N Price; Adam M Deutschbauer; Adam P Arkin
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2020-10-13       Impact factor: 8.029

Review 7.  Evolutionary Ecology and Interplay of Prokaryotic Innate and Adaptive Immune Systems.

Authors:  Tatiana Dimitriu; Mark D Szczelkun; Edze R Westra
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2020-10-05       Impact factor: 10.834

8.  The N-terminal domain of Staphylothermus marinus McrB shares structural homology with PUA-like RNA binding proteins.

Authors:  Christopher J Hosford; Myfanwy C Adams; Yiming Niu; Joshua S Chappie
Journal:  J Struct Biol       Date:  2020-07-08       Impact factor: 2.867

9.  Cocultivation of an ultrasmall environmental parasitic bacterium with lytic ability against bacteria associated with wastewater foams.

Authors:  Steven Batinovic; Jayson J A Rose; Julian Ratcliffe; Robert J Seviour; Steve Petrovski
Journal:  Nat Microbiol       Date:  2021-04-29       Impact factor: 17.745

Review 10.  Anti-CRISPRs go viral: The infection biology of CRISPR-Cas inhibitors.

Authors:  Yuping Li; Joseph Bondy-Denomy
Journal:  Cell Host Microbe       Date:  2021-01-13       Impact factor: 21.023

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