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Viruses May Be ‘Watching’ You – Some Microbes Lie In Wait Until Their Hosts Unknowingly Give Them The Signal To Start Multiplying And Kill Them

Phages can sense bacterial DNA damage, which triggers them to replicate and jump ship.

Credit:nobeastsofierce/Shutterstock

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After more than two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, you might picture a virus as a nasty spiked ball – a mindless killer that gets into a cell and hijacks its machinery to create a gazillion copies of itself before bursting out. For many viruses, including the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, the “mindless killer” epithet is essentially true.

But there’s more to virus biology than meets the eye.

Take HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. HIV is a retrovirus that does not go directly on a killing spree when it enters a cell. Instead, it integrates itself into your chromosomes and chills, waiting for the right moment to command the cell to make copies of it and burst out to infect other immune cells and eventually cause AIDS.

Exactly what moment HIV is waiting for is still an area of active study. But research on other viruses has long hinted ...

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