Hendrix Roger
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, A340A Langley Hall, 4400 5th Ave, Pittsburgh, PA15260, USA.
Mol Microbiol. 2008 Jun;68(5):1077-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2008.06251.x. Epub 2008 Apr 23.
Nothing is more iconic of the early days of molecular biology than the image of a bacteriophage infecting an Escherichia coli cell. It is perhaps surprising therefore that more than 50 years later, it is still possible to learn something entirely new and unexpected about how phage infection works, as we see in the paper by Edgar et al. of this issue of Molecular Microbiology. The results give fundamental new insight into the way these viruses infect their hosts and promise to open new windows on the virus-host interactions that have shaped the evolution of both.
在分子生物学早期,没有什么比噬菌体感染大肠杆菌细胞的画面更具代表性了。因此,或许令人惊讶的是,50多年后的今天,正如我们在本期《分子微生物学》中埃德加等人的论文中所看到的,关于噬菌体感染如何发生,仍有可能了解到全新且意想不到的东西。这些结果为这些病毒感染宿主的方式提供了全新的基本见解,并有望为塑造了两者进化的病毒 - 宿主相互作用打开新的窗口。