A recent study claimed that the Ganga river has 1,100 types of bacteriophages that selectively target and destroy bacteria, thus purifying the water naturally. Researcher Dr Ajay Sonkar ...
Amid concerns over water quality, a recent study suggests that bacteriophages — viruses that selectively destroy bacteria — play a crucial role in naturally purifying the Ganga. Researcher Dr ...
Researchers are investigating whether certain viruses known as bacteriophages, or phages, which specifically infect bacteria but not human cells, affect the development of type 1 diabetes in young ...
Dr. Sonkar’s research identified 1,100 distinct types of bacteriophages in the river, which he described as microscopic viruses acting as efficient natural purifiers. These bacteriophages attach ...
Bacteriophages, the most abundant life form on Earth, infect bacterial cells and influence the structure of the microbial community. To fend off phage attacks, bacteria have evolved their own ...
It’s a zoo of an airport. ‘British Airways [whose home is T5] does a great job, but there are so many people being funnelled through Heathrow’s security so it’s very chaotic, and I ...
We also detect a lot of bacteriophages. Strangely, we detect a lot of insect viruses, which are presumably from insects that … were on the fruits or whatever food that we were eating.
Russell Henley used a clutch chip in for eagle on the par-5 16th hole at Bay Hill to jump ahead of Collin Morikawa at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, and Henley never relinquished that spot.
Renowned liver specialist Dr. Cyriac Abby Philips—popularly known as The Liver Doc on X—slammed and questioned the claim that ...
The top scientist likens Ganga’s power to seawater, crediting its bacteriophages for eliminating pollution and harmful bacteria before vanishing themselves. Known as Ganga’s ‘security guard ...