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Phages: jack-of-all-trades or master of one?

November 26, 2025

Phages: jack-of-all-trades or master of one?

Capsule diversity limits phage host range by affecting receptor-binding protein (RBP) interactions in capsulated bacteria. Celia Ferriol-González and Pilar Domingo-Calap show that generalist phages evolve host range through RBP mutations and recombination, while specialist phages remain stable, offering insights into phage adaptation and strategies for enhancing phage-based therapeutic applications.

Image credit: pbio.3003515

PLOS Biologue

Community blog for PLOS Biology, PLOS Genetics and PLOS Computational Biology.

PLOS BIOLOGUE

11/26/2025

Research Article

Electrophysiological mapping of the human spinal cord

The role of the spinal cord in relaying brain-body signals has been hard to study due to challenges in noninvasive neural imaging. Giulio Gabrieli, Gian Domenico Iannetti and colleagues develop a new approach called Electrical Spinal Imaging (ESI) that enables high-resolution, noninvasive recordings, revealing distinct neural responses and how attention modulates spinal activity. 

Image credit: pbio.3003116

Electrophysiological mapping of the human spinal cord

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Current Issue October 2025

11/25/2025

Research Article

GlcNAc-mediated nutrient signaling in Streptomyces

N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) accumulation acts as a key metabolic signal in Streptomyces, but how it triggers developmental responses is unclear. Chao Li, Mia Urem, Jan Pieter Abrahams, Lennart Schada von Borzyskowski, Gilles van Wezel and co-workers show that the novel enzyme NagS dehydrates GlcNAc-6P into a reactive intermediate, triggering a toxicity-based checkpoint that governs nutrient signalling in Streptomyces.

Image credit: pbio.3003514

GlcNAc-mediated nutrient signaling in Streptomyces

11/25/2025

Research Article

Collaborating brains think alike

How do brains align during social interaction to support shared understanding? Denise Moerel, Manuel Varlet and co-authors show that interbrain information alignment emerges rapidly and strengthens with practice, with distinct neural processes supporting sensory synchrony during early alignment and shared cognitive representation in real pairs during late alignment.

Image credit: Denise Moerel & Manuel Varlet

Collaborating brains think alike

11/25/2025

Research Article

Extracting hydrophobic compounds from membranes

In E.coli, three of the four Type VII ABC transporter systems have been structurally characterized. Martin McAndrew, Allister Crow and colleagues solve cryo-EM structures of the fourth system, YbbAP-TesA, suggesting that YbbAP extracts hydrophobic compounds from the bacterial inner membrane and presents them to periplasmic TesA for hydrolysis. Don't miss the Primer by Ben Luisi.


Extracting hydrophobic compounds from membranes

Image credit: pbio.3003427

11/24/2025

Research Article

APP and Na+ channels in Purkinje cells

The presence of aberrant forms of amyloid precursor protein (APP) is linked to Alzheimer disease, but its loss leads to motor deficits. Miao-Jin Ji, Tong-Xuan Wu, Chao Liu and co-workers show that APP supports motor coordination in mice by regulating sodium channels in cerebellar Purkinje cells, expanding our understanding of this protein's role in the brain.

APP and Na+ channels in Purkinje cells

Image credit: pbio.3003513

11/24/2025

Research Article

Tethering the conoid in Toxoplasma

The conoid is a structure in Apicomplexans that undergoes extrusion during egress, gliding motility, and invasion. Romuald Haase, Bingjian Ren, Oscar Vadas, Dominique Soldati-Favre and co-authors show that the coiled-coil protein RNG2 tethers the conoid to the apical polar ring in Toxoplasma gondii; in its absence, the conoid detaches, blocking parasite motility and rhoptry secretion.

Tethering the conoid in Toxoplasma

Image credit: Romuald Haase and Albert Tell i Puig

11/19/2025

Essay

Bacterial immunity and microbiome structure

Bacterial immune systems have evolved in response to diverse molecular "parasites." This Essay explores how interactions between mobile genetic elements and bacterial defenses shape microbiome structure and function.

Bacterial immunity and microbiome structure

Image credit: pbio.3003489

11/14/2025

editorial

The body sends a signal: Perspectives on interoception

Research into brain–body communication is being reinvigorated as the field unites under the umbrella of ‘interoception’. This Editorial highlights four Perspectives that show the breadth of this emerging field.

The body sends a signal: Perspectives on interoception

Image credit: Pixabay user H.B.

11/13/2025

Perspective

Rethinking food reward and obesity

Is overeating driven by hedonism? This Perspective argues that the pleasure of eating food is not a driver of the obesity epidemic, but rather the regular consumption of an unhealthy diet blunts sensitivity to interoceptive signals that drive food reward.

Rethinking food reward and obesity

Image credit: Pixabay user PlaNet Fox

11/13/2025

Perspective

Interoception in Whole Person Health

Decoding the body’s internal signals could revolutionize Whole Person Health. This Perspective suggests a research framework linking brain, body and behavior to foster resilience, self-regulation and holistic well-being.

Interoception in Whole Person Health

Image credit: pbio.3003487

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