(Press-News.org) CORAL GABLES, FL (JULY 23, 2013) — Purple bacteria contain pigments that allow them to use sunlight as their source of energy, hence their color. Small as they are, these microbes can teach us a lot about life on Earth, because they have been around longer than most other organisms on the planet. University of Miami (UM) physicist Neil Johnson, who studies purple bacteria, recently found that these organisms can also survive in the presence of extreme alien light. The findings show that the way in which light is received by the bacteria can dictate the difference between life and death.
Johnson, head of the inter-disciplinary research group in complexity in the College of Arts and Sciences at UM and his collaborators share their findings in a paper titled "Extreme alien light allows survival of terrestrial bacteria" published online in Nature's Scientific Reports. The study reveals new possibilities for life on earth and elsewhere in the universe.
"The novelty of our work is that despite all the effort aimed at finding planets outside our solar system where life might exist, people have ignored the fact that photosynthesis--and hence life on Earth-- isn't just about having the right atmosphere and light intensity," Johnson says. "Instead, as we show, a crucial missing ingredient is how the light arrives at the organism."
The results are also applicable in the scenario of our own sun developing extreme fluctuations and in a situation in which bacteria are subject to extreme artificial light sources in the laboratory.
The findings may also help with engineering a new generation of designer-light-harvesting structures.
Using a mathematical model the researchers calculated the probability of survival when the bacteria is subjected to bursts of light, similar to what might be experienced if the light source was an unstable star. The flow of light was on average the same as the bacteria would normally receive, but since they would be receiving it in such a strange way, the researchers wondered under what situations the bacteria could survive.
"It's like saying we know we need to bring home a certain amount of food per week, but what happens if all of the food is delivered in one day? You might not be able to store all of it," Johnson says. "Maybe some food would get spoiled, or maybe you wouldn't have time to use it all," he says. "The light is like food for the bacteria, and the issue is the amount of food and the timing with which you bring it in."
Light comes in packets of photons. Purple bacteria process light in places callereaction centers, where the energy of the photons fuels the production of metabolic materials. Johnson compares the situation to asking what happens when food arrives in the kitchen in an irregular way.
"The reaction center, like any kitchen, can't do a thousand things at once. They can only handle one photon at a time," Johnson says. "The new chemicals made in the process take some time to diffuse. Otherwise, it results in a buildup of chemicals that can kill the bacteria," he says. "Since we are concluding this from statistical calculations, we can say it's very unlikely that the bacteria will survive."
To their surprise, the researchers found that while many seemingly innocuous changes in the way the light arrives at the organisms end up proving fatal, the bacteria could survive a sudden deluge of photons. The key to enduring such extreme conditions is that that there are many reaction center 'kitchens.' Therefore, the photons spread out naturally, leaving each reaction center enough time to recover.
"Ultimately the chemicals have time to diffuse and that is what saves it," Johnson says. "On the average the bacteria is therefore getting what it needs from the reaction centers."
The researchers suspect this mechanism is not unique to purple bacteria. In the future, they will expand the study to other photosynthetic life forms.
INFORMATION:
Co-authors of the study are Guannan Zhao, who was a postdoctoral fellow at UM at the time of the project; Pedro Manrique and Hong Qi doctoral students at UM; Felipe Caycedo, postdoctoral fellow at Universitat Ulm, Germany; Ferney Rodriguez and Luis Quiroga, professors at Universidad de Los Andes, Bogota, Colombia.
The University of Miami's mission is to educate and nurture students, to create knowledge, and to provide service to our community and beyond. Committed to excellence and proud of our diversity of our University family, we strive to develop future leaders of our nation and the world. http://www.miami.edu.
Purple bacteria on earth could survive alien light
University of Miami researchers show that extreme alien light could support life of terrestrial bacteria
2013-07-23
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
MU, K-State research team collaborate to save the bacon
2013-07-23
COLUMBIA, Mo. -- A research team from the University of Missouri and Kansas State University has been working to find a cure for a specific virus that affects pigs and costs the hog industry $800 million annually. In their latest study, the team disproved one way the virus spreads, which will help scientists narrow the search for an ultimate cure.
Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome Virus (PRRSV) can inhibit pigs from reproducing and slow the growth of young pigs. Once pigs are infected, the only remedy is for hog farmers to cull their herds, which has cost ...
Scientists prove ticks harbor Heartland virus, a recently discovered disease in the United States
2013-07-23
DEERFIELD, IL. (JULY 22, 2013)— Scientists have for the first time traced a novel virus that infected two men from northwestern Missouri in 2009 to populations of ticks in the region, providing confirmation that lone star ticks are carrying the recently discovered virus and humans in the area are likely at risk of infection. The findings were published online today in the American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene.
Dubbed Heartland virus or HRTV, the infection causes fever, headaches, and low white blood cell and platelet counts. The two men infected in 2009, who ...
Most flammable boreal forests in North America become more so
2013-07-23
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A 2,000-square-kilometer zone in the Yukon Flats of interior Alaska – one of the most flammable high-latitude regions of the world, according to scientists – has seen a dramatic increase in both the frequency and severity of fires in recent decades. Wildfire activity in this area is higher than at any other time in the past 10,000 years, the researchers report.
The new findings add to the evidence that relatively frequent and powerful fires are converting the conifer-rich boreal forests of Alaska into deciduous woodlands. Deciduous trees, which shed ...
Bees 'betray' their flowers when pollinator species decline
2013-07-23
Remove even one bumblebee species from an ecosystem and the impact is swift and clear: Their floral "sweethearts" produce significantly fewer seeds, a new study finds.
The study, to be published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, focused on the interactions between bumblebees and larkspur wildflowers in Colorado's Rocky Mountains. The results show how reduced competition among pollinators disrupts floral fidelity, or specialization, among the remaining bees in the system, leading to less successful plant reproduction.
"We found that these wildflowers ...
Plain packaging seems to make cigarettes less appealing and increase urgency to quit smoking
2013-07-23
Plain packaging for cigarettes seems to make tobacco less appealing and increase the urgency to quit smoking, suggest early findings from Australia, published in the online journal BMJ Open.
Australia formally introduced plain brown packaging, accompanied by graphic health warnings taking up three quarters of the front of the pack, for all tobacco products on December 1 2012. So far, it is the only country in the world to have done so.
The researchers wanted to find out what effects the policy was having in the early stages, and whether it helped curb the appeal of ...
Skipping breakfast may increase coronary heart disease risk
2013-07-23
Here's more evidence why breakfast may be the most important meal of the day: Men who reported that they regularly skipped breakfast had a higher risk of a heart attack or fatal coronary heart disease in a study reported in the American Heart Association journal Circulation.
Researchers analyzed food frequency questionnaire data and tracked health outcomes for 16 years (1992-2008) on 26,902 male health professionals ages 45-82. They found:
Men who reported they skipped breakfast had a 27 percent higher risk of heart attack or death from coronary heart disease than those ...
No benefit associated with echocardiographic screening in the general population
2013-07-23
A study in Norway suggests echocardiographic screening in the general public for structural and valvular heart disease was not associated with benefit for reducing the risk of death, myocardial infarction (heart attack) or stroke, according to a report published by JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication.
Because of the low prevalence of structural heart disease in the general population, echocardiography has traditionally not been considered justified in low-risk individuals, although echocardiography is recommended for screening asymptomatic individuals with ...
Study examines use of transthoracic echocardiography
2013-07-23
A study of the use of transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) at an academic medical center suggests that although 9 in 10 of the procedures were appropriate under 2011 appropriate use criteria, less than 1 in 3 of the TTEs resulted in an active change in care, according to a report of the research by Susan Matulevicius, M.D., and colleagues at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.
The researchers, who studied 535 patients undergoing TTE, found that, overall, 31.8 percent of TTEs resulted in an active change in care; 46.9 percent resulted in a continuation ...
Parents' experiences with pediatric retail clinics examined
2013-07-23
Parents who had established relationships with pediatricians still accessed care for their children at retail clinics (RCs), typically located in large chain drugstores, mostly because the clinics were convenient, according to a study published by JAMA Pediatrics, a JAMA Network publication.
Most RCs are staffed by nonpediatric nurse practitioners and physician assistants who care for patients 18 months and older with minor illnesses such as ear and throat infections. However, the literature regarding RCs is limited and little is known about the use of RCs for pediatric ...
Vascular complications of fungal meningitis after contaminated spinal injections
2013-07-23
A case series by researchers at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., examined three patients with ischemic stroke who later received a diagnosis of fungal meningitis attributed to epidural injections of contaminated methylprednisolone for low back pain.
The recent identification of injections of contaminated methylprednisolone acetate has highlighted the different clinical presentations of fungal meningitis, which can have an incubation period of one to four weeks between the last spinal injection and when a patient seeks medical care.
"Fungal meningitis due to ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Why don’t pandas eat more meat? Molecules found in bamboo may be behind their plant-based diet
Development of 'transparent stretchable substrate' without image distortion could revolutionize next-generation displays
Improving the scope of wearable monitors
Zeroing in: SMU project to boost indoor localization capabilities for the public agencies
E. coli strain in Egyptian dairy products also found in Japan school outbreak
Quantum computing “a marathon, not a sprint”
Large population study identifies long-term health risks after COVID-19 hospitalization
Element relational graph-augmented multi-granularity contextualized encoding for document-level event role filler extraction
Employee burnout can cost employers millions each year
The cost of domestic violence to women's employment and education
Critical illness more common than expected in African hospitals - low-cost treatments offer hope
How our lungs back up the bone marrow to make our blood
Fat transport deficiency explains rare childhood metabolic crises
Remote work “a protective shield” against gender discrimination
How air pollution and wildfire smoke may contribute to memory loss in Alzheimer’s disease
UAF scientist designing satellite to hunt small space debris
Innate immune training aggravates inflammatory bone loss
An ancient RNA-guided system could simplify delivery of gene editing therapies
Mayo Clinic recognized as ‘World’s Best Hospital’ by Newsweek for the seventh straight year
Self-driving cars learn to share road knowledge through digital word-of-mouth
Medicaid extension policies that cover all immigrants in a post-COVID world reduce inequities in postpartum insurance coverage
Physical activity linked to lower risk of dementia, sleep disorders, other diseases
Columbia’s Public Health School launches Climate & Health Center
$4.9 million grant enables test of psychedelic MDMA as enhancement for PTSD therapy
Emerging treatments for social disconnection in psychiatric illness
Leading the charge to better batteries
Consequences of overplanting rootworm-resistant maize in the US Corn Belt
The distinct role of Earth’s orbit in 100-thousand-year glacial cycles
Genome-based phylogeny resolves complicated Molluscan family tree
Studying locusts in virtual reality challenges models of collective behavior
[Press-News.org] Purple bacteria on earth could survive alien lightUniversity of Miami researchers show that extreme alien light could support life of terrestrial bacteria