Mammal cells use some viruses like vitamins, study hints

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Emily is a health news writer based in London, United Kingdom. She holds a bachelor's degree in biology from Durham University and a master's degree in clinical and therapeutic neuroscience from Oxford University. She has worked in science communication, medical writing and as a local news reporter while undertaking journalism training.

On the menu tonight, a nice, nutritional, bacteria-killing virus. Sounds unappealing? It may not be to your cells.

" opens up a new area of symbiosis and symbiotic interactions between phages and mammalian cells," senior study author Jeremy Barr, an associate professor of biological sciences at Monash University in Australia, told Live Science."I think this study suggests that there may be a lot more that we're unaware of."Phages are the most abundant biological entities on the planet.

The broader health impacts of the study are still unknown, Barr said. The authors also only looked at one phage species, while estimates suggest there are as many as 10^15 phages in the gut). In addition, the results may be a side effect of using immortalized cancer cell lines, which are already more likely to grow and proliferate, he said.

 

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