A membrane-bound nuclease directly cleaves phage DNA during genome injection
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- Published: 25 February 2026
A membrane-bound nuclease directly cleaves phage DNA during genome injection
- Daniel S. Saxton1,
- Peter C. DeWeirdt1,2,
- Christopher R. Doering
orcid.org/0000-0003-1608-10201,
- Ian J. Roney
orcid.org/0000-0002-3320-11701 &
- …
- Michael T. Laub
orcid.org/0000-0002-8288-76071,3
Nature
(2026)Cite this article
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Subjects
- Microbiology
- Molecular biology
Abstract
From mammals to bacteria, the direct recognition and cleavage of viral nucleic acids is a potent defence strategy against viral infection, but it requires mechanisms for distinguishing self from non-self1,2. In bacteria, CRISPR–Cas and restriction-modification systems achieve this discrimination by recognizing specific DNA sequences or DNA modifications, respectively. Alternative mechanisms probably remain to be discovered. Here, we characterize SNIPE, an anti-bacteriophage defence system that constitutively localizes to the bacterial cell membrane in Escherichia coli to block phage λ infection. Using radiolabelled phage DNA and time-lapse microscopy to track phage genomes, we demonstrate that SNIPE directly cleaves phage DNA during genome injection. Based on proximity labelling, we find that SNIPE associates with host proteins essential for λ genome entry and with the λ tape measure protein, which facilitates λ genome injection across the inner membrane. SNIPE also defends against diverse siphoviruses, probably through direct interactions with their tape measure proteins. Our findings establish SNIPE as a widespread bacterial defence system that exploits the spatial organization of phage genome injection to specifically target viral DNA, representing a previously unknown strategy for distinguishing self from non-self in prokaryotic immune systems.
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