A new study published in Nature Microbiology reveals that purine-rich DNA sequences in Bacillus subtilis protect its genes from Rho-dependent termination. Researchers discovered that the high frequency of purines (guanine and adenine) in coding DNA strands prevents Rho, a quality-control protein, from terminating essential RNA transcripts. This finding challenges previous assumptions about the relationship between transcription and translation in bacteria, showing that Rho selectively targets non-coding RNA while allowing functional transcripts to proceed. The study suggests that Rho has influenced the evolutionary development of the B. subtilis genome by promoting purine-rich sequences in coding regions. Bacteria lacking Rho do not display this purine bias.
Lectura del sesgo (Centro): The article presents scientific findings without overt ideological framing. It focuses on biological mechanisms and experimental results, using neutral language and citing academic sources. There is no indication of partisan bias or agenda-driven narrative.






