Newly-discovered 'Borg' DNA is unlike anything scientists have ever seen + Bed horror

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Your bed probably isn’t as clean as you think – a microbiologist explains
https://theconversation.com/your-bed-pro...ins-163513

INTRO: There’s nothing quite like crawling into bed, wrapping up in your blankets, and nestling your head into your pillow. But before you get too comfortable, you might want to know that your bed isn’t all that dissimilar to a petri dish. The combination of sweat, saliva, dandruff, dead skin cells and even food particles make it the optimal environment for a whole host of germs such as bacteria, fungi, viruses and even tiny bugs to grow. Here are just a few of the things that lurk beneath our covers.... (MORE)


Newly-discovered 'Borg' DNA is unlike anything scientists have ever seen
https://www.vice.com/en/article/88ndvp/n...-ever-seen

EXCERPT: Borgs are extrachromosomal elements, meaning that these DNA sequences are found outside the chromosomes that lie within the nucleus of most cells and that contain the majority of an organism’s genetic material. Examples of extrachromosomal elements include plasmids, which can replicate outside of a host’s chromosomes, and some viruses.

Exactly what Borgs are remains a mystery at this point, but it is clear that they share genes and proteins with organisms that oxidize methane, called methanotrophs, that belong to the genus Methanoperedens, suggesting that they acquired these elements through past gene transfers. Methanotrophs are of immense interest to climate change researchers because they reduce atmospheric emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas that contributes to rising global temperatures.

“Speaking for myself, I was really very excited, especially once it became clear that they carry genes directly involved in methane oxidation,” said senior author Jillian Banfield, a biogeochemist and geomicrobiologist at the University of California, Berkeley, in an email.

Banfield and her colleagues realized they were dealing with something special after sequencing DNA found in the wetlands of Lake County, California. Her team includes several researchers from the Innovative Genomics Institute (IGI), a partnership between UC Berkeley and the University of California, San Francisco that was founded by Jennifer Doudna, who received the 2020 Nobel Prize for Chemistry and is a co-author of the new study.

The researchers have studied a huge variety of microbial entities—bacteria, archaea, eukaryotes, viruses, phages, and plasmids, for instance—that inhabit watery habitats such as groundwater aquifers, soils, and vernal pools. The Borgs were clearly different from anything they had seen before, hinting at a distinct evolutionary origin... (MORE - details)
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