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Double duty
When the Herpes virus attacks, its mi
rnas undertake double duty, found scientists. When a cell
has to produce a protein, the dna unzips, a messenger rna
(mrna) mirrors one of its strands for protein codes. Micro
rnas (mirnas) sometimes attach to portions of mrnas, not allowing
those parts to code for the protein. This is a regulatory
mechanism which the virus takes advantage of. Viral mirnas
regulate viral genes and also latch on to the immune cells
mrnas disallowing formation of anti-viral proteins.
Source: Down to Earth,
June 2010

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