When scientists sent bacteria-infecting viruses to the International Space Station, the microbes did not behave the same way ...
Scientists have infected bacteria with a virus aboard the International Space Station to see how they would interact in ...
Scientists found that the space station phages gradually accumulated specific mutations that boosted their infectivity, or ...
Space-evolved viruses show enhanced killing power against antibiotic-resistant bacteria, offering new pathways for phage ...
Live Science on MSN
Viruses that evolved on the space station and were sent back to Earth were more effective at killing bacteria
Near-weightless conditions can mutate genes and alter the physical structures of bacteria and phages, disrupting their normal ...
The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists found viruses behave strangely in space and it might save lives
When scientists sent bacteria and their viral predators, bacteriophages, to the International Space Station (ISS), they ...
Bacteria and viruses are locked in a slow motion battle aboard the ISS that looks nothing like life on the ground.
Far from Earth's gravitational pull, a simple viral infection took on a new evolutionary direction. A study conducted aboard the ISS found that when bacteria and ...
Viruses that infect bacteria can still do their job in microgravity, but space changes the rules of the fight.
The International Space Station (ISS) is one of the most unique environments where life has ever existed, out in the low ...
Bacteria and viruses are often lumped together as germs, and they share many characteristics. They’re invisible to the human eye. They’re everywhere. And both can make us sick, even kill us. That last ...
Researchers from New England Biolabs (NEB®) and Yale University describe the first fully synthetic bacteriophage engineering ...
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