Kommireddy Vasu and Valakunja Nagaraja
SUMMARY
Restriction-modification (R-M) systems are ubiquitous and are often
considered primitive immune systems in bacteria. Their
diversity and prevalence across the prokaryotic
kingdom are an indication of their success as a defense mechanism
against
invading genomes. However, their cellular
defense function does not adequately explain the basis for their
immaculate specificity
in sequence recognition and nonuniform
distribution, ranging from none to too many, in diverse species. The
present review
deals with new developments which provide
insights into the roles of these enzymes in other aspects of cellular
function.
In this review, emphasis is placed on novel
hypotheses and various findings that have not yet been dealt with in a
critical
review. Emerging studies indicate their role in
various cellular processes other than host defense, virulence, and even
controlling
the rate of evolution of the organism. We also
discuss how R-M systems could have successfully evolved and be involved
in
additional cellular portfolios, thereby
increasing the relative fitness of their hosts in the population.
Copia del trabajo en la Moodle.
Copia del trabajo en la Moodle.
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