"Use it or lose it." This is great advice for exercise, but when cells need to slow down or go dormant, they need to store ribosomes to recover growth in the future. They use hibernation factors to do this. Here is our latest story on how archaea hibernate ribosomes (1/7):
doi.org/10.64898/202...
The best thing since *before* sliced bread... VIPRs.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
Excited to share our first work on protein design! Huge thanks to the entire team, and especially to Bel, Evan, to the Doudna, Jacobsen, Cate, Banfield labs, all co-authors, and my D-lab mates! 💫
Our lab is proud to present our latest work harnessing Bridge Recombinase for genome-scale editing in diverse bacteria, microbiome editing, and programmable horizontal gene transfer.
doi.org
A very nice Preview of our work in
@cp-cellhostmicrobe.bsky.social
this morning from Chrishan Fernando & Nicole D. Marino! www.cell.com/cell-host-mi...
Jamie Cate
www.biorxiv.org
New paper! How do RNAs "know" where to go inside a cell? We dug into the sequence elements that route RNAs to the right place. It turns out that, in mammals, they're surprisingly massive (>200 nt), multipartite, and wonderfully complicated. 🧵