Joel MJ Tan
@joelmjtan.bsky.social
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PhD Candidate in the Kranzusch Lab at Harvard Medical School
Booby traps and viral sponges! Had a really great time with
@reneechang.bsky.social
distilling our research into a fun 30 sec video describing the arms race between bacteria and viruses. More info at
blog.dana-farber.org/insight/2025...
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
add a skeleton here at some point
2 months ago
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reposted by
Joel MJ Tan
Sorek Lab
2 months ago
We wrote a review on the free nucleotide pool as a central playground in human, bacterial, and plant immunity – now out in Nature Reviews in Immunology
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Was fun to write this piece with Dina Hochhauser! Here is a thread to explain the premises 1/
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Manipulation of the nucleotide pool in human, bacterial and plant immunity - Nature Reviews Immunology
Modification of the nucleotide pool is emerging as key to innate immunity in animals, plants and bacteria. This Review explains how immune pathways conserved from bacteria to humans manipulate the nuc...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41577-025-01206-w
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reposted by
Joel MJ Tan
Kranzusch Lab
3 months ago
A new preprint led by Sonomi Yamaguchi in our lab describes a bacterial anti-phage defense system named Clover that uses nucleotide signals to both activate and inhibit host immunity.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
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reposted by
Joel MJ Tan
Malcolm White
3 months ago
Here we show how the type III signalling molecule SAM-AMP is bound and degraded by a specialised lyase enzyme encoded in cellular and phage genomes. More great work by
@haotianchi.bsky.social
and the team.
@uniofstandrews.bsky.social
academic.oup.com/nar/article/...
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SAM-AMP lyases in type III CRISPR defence
Abstract. Type III CRISPR systems detect non-self RNA and activate the enzymatic Cas10 subunit, which generates nucleotide second messengers for activation
https://academic.oup.com/nar/article/53/13/gkaf655/8198041
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reposted by
Joel MJ Tan
Kranzusch Lab
3 months ago
Starting the lab Bluesky account to share a preprint from
@aragucci.bsky.social
and
@sadieantine.bsky.social
‬ that reveals molecular principles shared across diverse nuclease-NTPase anti-phage defense systems in bacterial immunity (1/7)
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
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Nuclease-NTPase systems use shared molecular features to control bacterial anti-phage defense
Bacteria encode an enormous diversity of defense systems including restriction-modification and CRISPR-Cas that cleave nucleic acid to protect against phage infection. Bioinformatic analyses demonstra...
https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.07.10.664194v1
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Joel MJ Tan
Nature
5 months ago
Nature research paper: A DNA-gated molecular guard controls bacterial Hailong anti-phage defence.
https://go.nature.com/4jXe4GO
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A DNA-gated molecular guard controls bacterial Hailong anti-phage defence - Nature
Animal and bacterial cells use nucleotidyltransferase (NTase) enzymes to respond to viral infection and control major forms of immune signaling including cGAS-STING innate immunity and CBASS anti-phage defence1-4. Here we discover a family of bacterial defence systems, which we name Hailong, that use NTase enzymes to constitutively synthesize DNA signals and guard against phage infection. Hailong protein B (HalB) is an NTase that converts deoxy-ATP into single-stranded DNA oligomers. A series of X-ray crystal structures define a stepwise mechanism of HalB DNA synthesis initiated by a C-terminal tyrosine residue that enables de novo enzymatic priming. We show that HalB DNA signals bind to and repress activation of a partnering Hailong protein A (HalA) effector complex. A 2.0 Å cryo-EM structure of the HalA–DNA complex reveals a membrane protein with a conserved ion channel domain and a unique crown domain that binds the DNA signal and gates activation. Analyzing Hailong defence in vivo, we demonstrate that viral DNA exonucleases required for phage replication trigger release of the primed HalA complex and induce protective host cell growth arrest. Our results explain how inhibitory nucleotide immune signals can serve as molecular guards against phage infection and expand the mechanisms NTase enzymes use to control antiviral immunity.
https://go.nature.com/4cUuMEt
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Joel MJ Tan
Dana-Farber News
5 months ago
New research featured in @nature.com from Joel Tan of @danafarbernews.bsky.social’s Kranzusch Lab (
kranzuschlab.med.harvard.edu
) reports the first example of an inhibitory nucleotide immune signal. Read more:
bit.ly/44bz6wW
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Excited to share my PhD work in the Kranzusch Lab published in
@nature.com
! Two key discoveries: - Nucleotides can act as negative regulators of antiviral immunity - Ion channel activation is gated by DNA Thank you to our all collaborators!
@soreklab.bsky.social
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
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A DNA-gated molecular guard controls bacterial Hailong anti-phage defence - Nature
Nature - A DNA-gated molecular guard controls bacterial Hailong anti-phage defence
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09058-z
5 months ago
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