Bacterial tresses conduct electricity.Bacteria that have hairlike structures called pill usually use them to attach to objects and to move around. However, new findings suggest that pill on a group of species known as Geobacter play a different role: They act as nanowires that conduct electricity. Geobacter has gained fame over the past several years as a promising treatment for radioactive pollution. By adding electrons to a toxic metal toxic metal Environment Any metal known to be toxic to humans–eg, antimony, arsenic, beryllium, bismuth, cadmium, lead, mercury, nickel. Cf Nontoxic metal. , such as uranium uranium (y rā`nēəm), radioactive metallic chemical element; symbol U; at. no. 92; at. wt. 238.0289; m.p. 1,132°C;; b.p. 3,818°C;; sp. gr. 19. , the bacterium bacterium /bac·te·ri·um/ (bak-ter´e-um) pl. bacte´ria [L.] in general, any of the unicellular prokaryotic microorganisms that commonly multiply by cell division, lack a nucleus or membrane-bound organelles, and possess a cell precipitates it out of wastewater. Previous research had shown that many other bacterial species transfer electrons using proteins called c-cytochromes. However, since these proteins aren't found in all Geobacter species, researchers didn't know how the bacteria without the proteins accomplished the same feat. Suspecting that Geobacter's pill might be responsible, Derek Lovley of the University of Massachusetts The system includes UMass Amherst, UMass Boston, UMass Dartmouth (affiliated with Cape Cod Community College), UMass Lowell, and the UMass Medical School. It also has an online school called UMassOnline. in Amherst and his colleagues shaved shave v. shaved, shaved or shav·en , shav·ing, shaves v.tr. 1. a. To remove the beard or other body hair from, with a razor or shaver: some off of the bacteria. The researchers found that the isolated pill efficiently conducted electricity generated by an atomic-force microscope. After genetically modifying some Geobacter so that they didn't produce pill, Lovley found that the bacteria still attached themselves to surfaces. However, the modified microbes didn't shuttle electrons onto metals. The researchers suggest in the June 23 Nature that information about how Geobacter's pill conduct electricity could provide ideas that might lead to synthetic nanowires made of protein.--C.B. |
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