Articles in 2010

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  • This month's Genome Watch looks at the differentBacillusspecies that can cause anthrax.

    • Susannah J. Salter
    Genome Watch
  • The formation ofCandida albicans biofilms on implanted medical devices is a major source of infection. Here, Finkel and Mitchell review the latest insights into the mechanisms and regulatory pathways that govern C. albicansbiofilm formation and biofilm-based drug resistance.

    • Jonathan S. Finkel
    • Aaron P. Mitchell
    Review Article
  • One promising application of synthetic biologies lies in the production of new drugs from secondary metabolites. In this Opinion article, Takano and colleagues describe potential strategies to spatially and temporally regulate the activity of metabolite biosynthetic modules for the design of efficient drug production systems.

    • Marnix H. Medema
    • Rainer Breitling
    • Eriko Takano
    Opinion
  • A new paper reports that theVibrio choleraetype VI secretion system can target both eukaryotic and bacterial cells.

    • Cesar Sanchez
    Research Highlight
  • Contact-dependent growth inhibition systems are widespread among Gram-negative bacteria, display distinct mechanisms of action and have roles in intraspecies competition.

    • Andrew Jermy
    Research Highlight
  • A new paper inPLoS Pathogens on Streptococcus pneumoniaepneumolysin provides the first example of the involvement of the NLRP3 inflammasome in protection against a Gram-positive bacterium.

    • Sheilagh Molloy
    Research Highlight
  • Pathogens utilize the sugar that is transported by a newly identified family of sugar transporters and, in some cases, induce the expression of these transporters.

    • Christiaan van Ooij
    Research Highlight
  • A new paper reports that the emergence of a more virulent strain of A/H1N1 pandemic influenza can occur by spontaneous mutations and re-assortment with seasonal viruses.

    • Cesar Sanchez
    Research Highlight
  • A mutualistic relationship between arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi and a member of the most ancient clade of land plants promotes carbon uptake, growth and asexual reproduction in the plant.

    • Andrew Jermy
    Research Highlight
  • This month's Genome Watch discusses the application of genomic analyses to the study of difficult-to-culture sexually transmitted pathogens.

    • Alejandro Sanchez-Flores
    Genome Watch
  • Recommendations on the regulation of synthetic biology in the United States provide important lessons on how to foster a nascent field of research while promoting public awareness and support.

    Editorial
  • Our monthly round up of infectious diseases news, which this month includes cholera in Haiti, exosomes for viral communication, the end of AIDS, statins as antibacterials, and a Q fever outbreak.

    Disease Watch
  • Non-coding DNA motifs play a central part in the bacterial cell cycle. El Karoui and colleagues review the roles of such motifs in replication, DNA segregation, DNA repair, cell division and DNA uptake, and explain how their distribution can be analysed quantitatively.

    • Fabrice Touzain
    • Marie-Agnès Petit
    • Meriem El Karoui
    Review Article
  • Infections involving slow-growing and persistent bacteria, includingMycobacterium tuberculosisand biofilms, are difficult to treat. Here, Hurdle and colleagues argue that developing antibiotics to target the bacterial membrane and membrane functions is a promising approach for the treatment for these difficult-to-treat infections.

    • Julian G. Hurdle
    • Alex J. O'Neill
    • Richard E. Lee
    Review Article
  • The Archaea evolved over 3 billion years ago but were only formally proposed as a domain 20 years ago. Today, many of the unique features and many of those that are shared with either the Bacteria or the Eukarya are well understood. Here, Ricardo Cavicchioli describes some of the important events in our appreciation of this fascinating group of organisms.

    • Ricardo Cavicchioli
    Review Article