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Phage liquid crystals and antibiotic susceptibility

June 5, 2026

Phage liquid crystals and antibiotic susceptibility

Biofilm matrices containing filamentous phages enable Pseudomonas aeruginosa to tolerate antibiotics. Abul Tarafder, Tanmay Bharat and colleagues show that nanobody disruption of phage Pf4 liquid crystalline droplets restores antibiotic susceptibility, highlighting a biophysical alternative to biochemical targeting.

Image credit: pbio.3003834

PLOS Biologue

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

PLOS BIOLOGUE

06/04/2026

Short Reports

E. coli attacker and defender roles

The type VI secretion system (T6SS) is a widespread nanoweapon deployed by bacteria, but why is its deployment heterogeneous in many species? This study of T6SS in Escherichia coli by Boris Taillefer, Eric Cascales and co-workers shows that adopting distinct attacker "ON" and defender "OFF" roles optimizes survival, and is a key strategy in microbial warfare.

Image credit: pbio.3003838

E. coli attacker and defender roles

Recently Published Articles

Current Issue

Current Issue April 2026

06/02/2026

Research Article

Rice miRNAs and cadmium uptake

Although subset of precursors can yield multiple mature miRNAs, how they simultaneously regulate a single biological process remains poorly understood. Fuxi Rong, Liang Wu and co-authors reveal that, in rice, dual mature miRNAs from one precursor regulate cadmium absorption and accumulation, with implications for producing low-cadmium rice.

Image credit: pbio.3003811

Rice miRNAs and cadmium uptake

05/29/2026

Short Reports

Inherited thrombocytopenia and tRNA cleavage

Pathogenic variants in the ribosome-associated endoribonuclease SLFN14 cause inherited thrombocytopenia, but the molecular basis of this disorder is unclear. Chengchao Ding, Yan Xiang and co-workers reveal that type II tRNA cleavage by mutant SLFN14 drives global translational repression and cell death.

Image credit: pbio.3003830

Inherited thrombocytopenia and tRNA cleavage

05/29/2026

Research Article

Perceived odor intensity... versus concentration

Some smells can seem stronger than others despite equivalent odor concentrations, but how does this occur? Frans Nordén, Irene Zanettin, Mikael Lundqvist, Artin Arshamian and Johan Lundström show that coordinated neural activity between the human olfactory bulb and piriform cortex tracks how intensely an odor is perceived, rather than physical concentration.

Perceived odor intensity... versus concentration

Image credit: pbio.3003810

05/21/2026

Research Article

Is BMP signaling "anti-neural"?

Bilaterian animals with centralized nervous systems have patterns of BMP signaling activity gradient that suggest an ‘anti-neural’ ancestral role. A study of cnidarians, by Paul Knabl, Grigory Genikhovich and co-workers, shows that BMP signalling can in fact promote neurogenesis and that the ‘anti-neural’ function described in vertebrates and arthropods is a side effect of its global function in DV axis patterning.

Is BMP signaling "anti-neural"?

Image credit: Paul Knabl

05/20/2026

Research Article

Phenazine wars between co-infecting bacteria

Polymicrobial infections often involve co-colonizing pathogens, but how do they interact across host environments? Katlyn Todd, Olivia Schneider, Jay Vornhagen and co-authors show that phenazines from Pseudomonas aeruginosa drive strain- and oxygen-dependent inhibition of Klebsiella pneumoniae, revealing context-specific rules of competition.

Phenazine wars between co-infecting bacteria

Image credit: pbio.3003809

06/04/2026

Essay

Strain nomenclature for bacterial pathogens

Unified bacterial strain taxonomies are crucial. This Essay provides an overview of a novel bacterial strain taxonomy and describes how this system can be used in population biology and epidemiological surveillance of infectious diseases.

Strain nomenclature for bacterial pathogens

Image credit: pbio.3003781

06/03/2026

Perspective

Will LLMs undermine critical thinking?

The use of large language models is rapidly transforming the scientific writing process, but this Perspective urges caution when using such tools, arguing that it can risk decoupling writing from thinking.

Will LLMs undermine critical thinking?

Image credit: Unsplash user Steve A Johnson

05/29/2026

Editorial

Lessons learned from the biology of aging

Aging affects us all, but we still do not know how the process evolves or if we can modulate its pace. This Editorial presents a Collection of articles that explores different aspects of aging, discussing what challenges still need to be overcome.

Lessons learned from the biology of aging

Image credit: Gustav Klimt

05/27/2026

Perspective

The ovary, beyond reproduction...

Classifying ovaries solely as reproductive organs has obscured their role as systemic regulators of female physiology. This Perspective discusses that ovarian aging is a primary determinant of healthspan and belongs at the center of geroscience.

The ovary, beyond reproduction...

Image credit: Pixabay user therapractice

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