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2024-08-04T01:39:00.0000000Z
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It's not just humans—bacteria also have memory, study suggests

Phys.Org

by Reichman University. A recent study led by Dr. Ilana Kolodkin-Gal from the Scojen Institute for Synthetic Biology at Reichman University has found that beneficial bacteria, such as Bacillus subtilis—which is used, among other things, as a probiotic and a biological control agent—have memory.

The bacteria are able to express genes associated with colonization and symbiosis with their host for generations, even after being detached from the host. This transfer of information between generations of bacteria allows them to efficiently recolonize a new host, giving them an advantage over naïve bacteria that have never formed a stable interaction with a plant.

The genes with multigenerational inheritance patterns were associated with resistance to stress, highlighting the importance of the defenses that the bacteria develop during plant colonization. This multigenerational inheritance stabilizes the interactions of the beneficial bacteria with their host. The researchers believe that similar mechanisms enable the multigenerational interaction of beneficial probiotic bacteria from the same group in the human gut, enabling long-term protection against disease.

Read on: https://phys.org/news/2024-07-humans-bacteria-memory.html

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