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Bacteria

Harnessing Electricity from Bacteria: Unlocking New Frontiers in Clean Technology

A team has discovered how certain bacteria breathe by generating electricity, using a natural process that pushes electrons into their surroundings instead of breathing on oxygen. The findings could enable new developments in clean energy and industrial biotechnology.

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The revolutionary discovery made by Rice University bioscientist Caroline Ajo-Franklin and her team has shed light on a previously hidden strategy in nature – bacteria’s ability to generate electricity through a natural process called extracellular respiration. This groundbreaking finding, published in Cell last month, has far-reaching implications for clean technology and industrial biotechnology.

Most organisms rely on oxygen to metabolize food and release energy. However, bacteria have evolved alternative ways to respire in oxygen-deprived environments, including deep-sea vents and the human gut. The researchers found that certain bacteria use naturally occurring compounds called naphthoquinones to transfer electrons to external surfaces. This process enables bacteria to thrive without oxygen, mimicking how batteries discharge electric current.

The mechanism of extracellular respiration was long observed but remained a mystery. Now, Ajo-Franklin’s team has uncovered its secret – a breakthrough that suggests this mode of respiration may be more widespread in nature than previously believed. “This newly discovered mechanism of respiration is a simple and ingenious way to get the job done,” said Biki Bapi Kundu, a Rice doctoral student and first author of the study.

The researchers partnered with the Palsson lab at the University of California San Diego to test their findings using advanced computer modeling and laboratory experiments. They simulated bacterial growth in environments devoid of oxygen but rich in conductive surfaces, confirming that bacteria could sustain themselves by discharging electrons externally.

This interdisciplinary approach has deepened our understanding of bacterial metabolism’s versatility and revealed a real-time method for electronically monitoring and influencing bacterial behavior. The foundational discovery has far-reaching practical implications, enabling new developments in clean energy and industrial biotechnology.

“Our work lays the foundation for harnessing carbon dioxide through renewable electricity, where bacteria function similarly to plants with sunlight in photosynthesis,” Ajo-Franklin said. “It opens the door to building smarter, more sustainable technologies with biology at the core.”

The technology may also enable bioelectronic sensors in oxygen-deprived environments, offering new tools for medical diagnostics, pollution monitoring, and deep-space exploration.

Bacteria

“Unlocking the Secrets of Wolbachia: How Frisky Flies Could Save Human Lives”

A scientist decided to find out why a bacterial infection makes fruit flies promiscuous. What he discovered could help curb mosquito-borne diseases and manage crop pests.

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Timothy Karr, an Arizona State University scientist, has made a groundbreaking discovery that could change the way we combat mosquito-borne diseases and manage crop pests. By studying the effects of Wolbachia, a parasitic bacteria that infects at least two out of every five insect species, on fruit flies, Karr and his team have found that it can make infected females more promiscuous.

Wolbachia’s goal is to spread to more hosts, but it can only pass from an infected mother to her offspring. To improve its chances, it influences its hosts so that infected females lay lots of infected eggs. In fruit flies, Wolbachia makes infected males unable to fertilize uninfected females’ eggs.

Karr and his colleagues set out to study what is happening inside the cells of infected female fruit flies to make them so promiscuous. They found that Wolbachia is perfectly positioned in the regions responsible for mating behavior and decision-making in the brain. Using a protein approach, they compared proteins in infected and uninfected female brains and found over 170 changes.

Three specific proteins were identified as being directly involved in the infection’s effect on mating behavior. By genetically changing their levels in uninfected flies, those flies began acting like the infected ones. Additionally, over 700 Wolbachia proteins were identified in female brains, with two of them interacting with the host fly’s proteins.

These findings have significant implications for managing disease-carrying insects and protecting crops with safer pesticides. Insights from this study might also help protect species like bees that face threats from viruses.

Karr believes that understanding how Wolbachia interacts with its hosts could lead to more lifesaving solutions. He is eager to continue studying the molecular basis of the bacteria’s influence on its hosts, and the team’s success with protein analysis may inspire new studies using this method.

In the words of Karr, “Proteins are where the rubber meets the road.” And it’s a road that could lead to more lifesaving solutions.

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Bacteria

Rivers Around the World Are Being Polluted with Antibiotics from Human Use

Millions of kilometers of rivers around the world are carrying antibiotic pollution at levels high enough to promote drug resistance and harm aquatic life, a new study warns. The study estimated the scale of global river contamination from human antibiotics use. Researchers calculated that about 8,500 tons of antibiotics — nearly one-third of what people consume annually — end up in river systems around the world each year even after in many cases passing through wastewater systems.

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The world’s rivers are facing an alarming threat: millions of kilometers of waterways are being contaminated with antibiotics from human use. According to a recent study led by McGill University researchers, this pollution has the potential to promote drug resistance and harm aquatic life on a massive scale.

Published in PNAS Nexus, the groundbreaking research is the first to estimate the global scope of river contamination caused by human antibiotic consumption. The team calculated that approximately 8,500 tonnes of antibiotics – about one-third of what people consume annually – end up in river systems worldwide each year, even after passing through wastewater treatment plants.

While individual antibiotic residues might be present at very low concentrations in most rivers, making them difficult to detect, the chronic and cumulative environmental exposure can still pose a risk to human health and aquatic ecosystems. This is particularly concerning for amoxicillin, the world’s most commonly used antibiotic, which was found to be most likely present at risky levels in Southeast Asia.

The region’s rising use of antibiotics combined with limited wastewater treatment has amplified the problem. The study emphasizes that it’s not about discouraging the use of antibiotics – we rely on them for global health treatments. Instead, the findings indicate unintended effects on aquatic environments and antibiotic resistance, which calls for mitigation and management strategies to minimize their implications.

The research used a global model validated by field data from nearly 900 river locations, excluding antibiotics from livestock or pharmaceutical factories, both significant contributors to environmental contamination. The study’s authors suggest that monitoring programs are essential to detect antibiotic or chemical contamination in waterways, especially in areas predicted to be at risk.

In conclusion, the study highlights the critical issue of antibiotic pollution in rivers arising from human consumption alone. While it would likely worsen with contributions from veterinary or industry sources, immediate action is needed to address this pressing concern and protect our planet’s precious aquatic resources.

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Bacteria

Unlocking Efficiency: Researchers Reveal Secrets of Cell Division with Min Proteins

The Min protein system prevents abnormal cell division in bacteria, but is poorly understood. Researchers have uncovered how engineered e.coli bacteria control protein levels for maximum efficiency.

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The Min protein system is a complex process that helps bacteria divide evenly and correctly. For decades, scientists have studied this system, but understanding how it works efficiently has been a challenge. Recently, researchers at the University of California San Diego (UCSD) made a groundbreaking discovery that sheds new light on the efficiency of cell division.

The UCSD team developed a way to control Min protein expression levels independently in E. coli cells. This allowed them to observe how different concentrations of Min proteins affect the oscillations between the poles of the cell. The results were surprising: despite varying concentrations, the oscillations remained stable across a wide range, with E. coli producing just the right amount of Min proteins.

This breakthrough is significant because it shows that the Min protein system can efficiently guide division to the correct location without relying on precise control over protein levels. This finding has far-reaching implications for our understanding of cellular organization and function.

The study was published in Nature Physics, a leading scientific journal, and was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The research team consisted of experts from both physics and chemistry/biochemistry departments at UCSD, highlighting the importance of interdisciplinary collaboration in advancing our knowledge of cellular biology.

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