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- Microbe with bizarrely tiny genome may be evolving into a virus
Regardless, she says the microbe is “fascinating” and she believes Sukunaarchaeum will allow for exciting, fundamental tests of how genomes evolve Adamala adds that if Sukunaarchaeum really does represent a microbe on its way to becoming a virus, it could teach scientists about how viruses evolved in the first place
- Microbe With Bizarrely Tiny Genome May Be Evolving Into a . . .
Microbe With Bizarrely Tiny Genome May Be Evolving Into a Virus (science org) 11 Posted by BeauHD on Tuesday June 17, 2025 @06:00AM from the blurring-the-lines dept sciencehabit shares a report from Science org: The newly discovered microbe provisionally known as Sukunaarchaeum isn't a virus
- Science - Hidden inside this dinoflagellate is a tiny . . .
Hidden inside this dinoflagellate is a tiny microbe so reliant on its host that scientists say it’s the most viruslike cellular organism known SCIENCE ORG Microbe with bizarrely tiny genome may be evolving into a virus
- Superbugs evolve inside the human body — tracking them in . . .
"Our study is the first to show that by tracking bacterial evolution in real-time, genome sequencing can reveal tricks bacteria use to survive, giving doctors the power to stay one step ahead and
- A View From My Disjointed Laptop - Issue #118
- Microbe with bizarrely tiny genome may be evolving into a virus - Sukunaarchaeum stands apart from viruses in one notable way: It can replicate its own genetic material Typically, viruses must hijack their hosts to make more of themselves
- 科学网—[转载]News from Science-297 - 崔锦华的博文
Microbe with bizarrely tiny genome may be evolving into a virus With DNA focused almost entirely on replication, newly discovered organism blurs the line between cells and viruses 13 JUN 2025 BY CHRISTIE WILCOX 2 Physicists’ hopes for an exotic muon collider get a boost
- Black Death: Gene mutation in a bacterium helped plague . . . - CNN
A change to a single gene in the bacterium Yersinia pestis has enabled one of the world’s most notorious pathogens to survive for centuries
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