CRISPR Provides Acquired Resistance Against Viruses in Prokaryotes
Rodolphe Barrangou(Danone (France)), Christophe Fremaux(Danone (France)), Hélène Deveau(Danone (France)), Melissa Richards(Danone (France)), Patrick Boyaval(Danone (France)), Sylvain Moineau(Danone (France)), Dennis Romero(Danone (France)), Philippe Horvath(Danone (France))
Cited by 6,269
Abstract
Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR) are a distinctive feature of the genomes of most Bacteria and Archaea and are thought to be involved in resistance to bacteriophages. We found that, after viral challenge, bacteria integrated new spacers derived from phage genomic sequences. Removal or addition of particular spacers modified the phage-resistance phenotype of the cell. Thus, CRISPR, together with associated cas genes, provided resistance against phages, and resistance specificity is determined by spacer-phage sequence similarity.
Related Papers
Intervening Sequences of Regularly Spaced Prokaryotic Repeats Derive from Foreign Genetic Elements
Francisco J. M. Mojica, Chc)sar D�ez-Villase�or, Jes�s Garc�a-Mart�nez et al.|Journal of Molecular Evolution|2005|2.2k