PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

The garden microbe with a sense of touch

2013-12-11
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Emma Thorne
emma.thorne@nottingham.ac.uk
44-115-951-5793
University of Nottingham
The garden microbe with a sense of touch A common soil dwelling bacterium appears to possess a sense of touch, researchers have shown.

A study, by Dr James Stratford at The University of Nottingham and Dr Simon Park at the University of Surrey, has found that Bacillus mycoides, which has been known to science since 1842, responds to forces and curvature in the medium on which it's growing.

The microbe's ability to respond to subtle changes in its environment, as revealed in the journal PLOS ONE, could signal potential useful scientific, engineering and medical applications for B. mycoides.

Dr Stratford, a research fellow at Nottingham's School of Life Sciences, said: "We happened to notice the way the growing bacteria interacted with small defects in our solid culture media and thought what if that's more than just random variation?"

Like living spiral art, the organism produces a spreading colony made up of repeatedly curving filaments. While its response to changes occurs in individual bacterial filaments on a microscopic level, the resulting pattern is easily visible to the naked eye on culture plates.

Whirlpool shaped structures the size of a human hand are produced in response to growth on curved surfaces and the organism can even respond to damage — holes cut in the gel on which it is growing lead to changes in the direction of nearby filaments.

The ability to respond to force allows filaments of B. mycoides to orient themselves towards objects which are causing even the tiniest disruptions to the surface nearby. B. mycoides was even able to 'find' small glass beads placed in the vicinity of the bacterial colony.

The study used high magnification time lapse to capture B. mycoides responding to a compression force in the agar gel being used as a growth medium. Images were taken at 20 minute intervals after force was applied.

Using this method it was possible to steer bacterial cells under the microscope from a distance by changing the direction of force in the growth medium. The bacterial filaments grow parallel to stretching and perpendicular to compression force. When the gel was squeezed by only 1% it resulted in a full 90° turn by the filament. It is not known exactly how the response works but theories include a molecular sensing mechanism related to motility or possibly that the bacterium follows the distorted gel surface like a record player's stylus follows the grooves in a vinyl.

With its rapid growth and ability to respond to force, B. mycoides could function as an easy-to-read living early warning system detecting strain and failure in structures under mechanical load.

Mechanotaxis - the ability to respond to force - is also an important organising mechanism for the assembly of multicellular organisms, helping to sculpt developing tissues and organs including those of humans. Insights into how the response works in this simple bacterium may further understanding of how mechanotaxis evolved.

INFORMATION:

The research paper, Variation in the Morphology of Bacillus mycoides Due to Applied Force and Substrate Structure, is available on the web at http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081549

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Toxic substances in banana plants kill root pests

2013-12-11
Toxic substances in banana plants kill root pests Banana plants protect themselves from parasitic nematodes by increasing local concentrations of defensive substances in infected root tissues This news release is available in German. ...

Picturing pain could help unlock its mysteries and lead to better treatments

2013-12-11
Picturing pain could help unlock its mysteries and lead to better treatments Understanding the science behind pain, from a simple "ouch" to the chronic and excruciating, has been an elusive goal for centuries. But now, researchers are reporting a promising ...

Each food fish can cause specific allergies

2013-12-11
Each food fish can cause specific allergies Research into protein provides new insight into fish allergies This news release is available in German. Leipzig. Food allergies are evidently much more specific than previously assumed. ...

Magpie parents know a baby cuckoo when they see one

2013-12-11
Magpie parents know a baby cuckoo when they see one Cuckoo fledglings are fed less frequently by magpie parents when raised together with magpie nestlings Cuckoos that lay their eggs in the nest of a magpie so that their chicks can be raised by the latter better hope ...

Keeping growth in check

2013-12-11
Keeping growth in check Ribosomal proteins RPL5 and RPL11 play an essential role in normal cell proliferation Researchers from the Laboratory of Cancer Metabolism (LCM) led by George Thomas at the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute ...

Queen's leads 6-million-euro European study to combat bowel cancer

2013-12-11
Queen's leads 6-million-euro European study to combat bowel cancer Queen's University has announced it is to lead a €6 million European study to find new treatments for bowel cancer. The research, which involves 13 partners in eight different European countries, ...

Hemophilia and long-term HIV infection -- is there a protective link?

2013-12-11
Hemophilia and long-term HIV infection -- is there a protective link? New Rochelle, NY, December 11, 2013—People with the genetic blood clotting disorder hemophilia who have been infected with HIV for decades have an increased ...

New system allows for high-accuracy, through-wall, 3-D motion tracking

2013-12-11
New system allows for high-accuracy, through-wall, 3-D motion tracking Technology could revolutionize gaming, fall detection among the elderly, and more Imagine playing a video game like Call of Duty or Battlefield and having the ability to lead your virtual ...

Precise docking sites for cells

2013-12-11
Precise docking sites for cells This news release is available in German. The Petri dish is a classical biological laboratory device, but it is no ideal living environment for many types of cells. Studies lose validity, as cell behavior on a flat plastic ...

UNL-led team finds less is more with adding graphene to nanofibers

2013-12-11
UNL-led team finds less is more with adding graphene to nanofibers Creates potential for high-performance, low-cost carbon nanofibers Lincoln, Neb., Dec. 11, 2103 -- Figuring that if some is good, more must be better, researchers have been trying to pack more ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Urban fungi show signs of thermal adaptation

How to identify and prevent fraudulent participants in health research

Parents' attachment style may be linked with risk of parental burnout, especially when associated with difficulty in understanding and identifying their emotions

Abnormal repetitive behaviors in mice are associated with oxidative stress

Double disadvantage hurts more than twice as much

Paradox of rotating turbulence finally tamed with world-class ‘hurricane-in-a-lab’

Brain pathway may fuel both aggression, self-harm

Study: Macrophage “bodyguard” disruptors could change breast cancer treatment by helping to overcome endocrine resistance

New study reveals southern ocean’s winter CO₂ outgassing underestimated by 40%

U of A-led team discovers large ritual constructions by early Mesoamericans

MIT study finds targets for a new tuberculosis vaccine

Kono awarded American Physical Society’s Isakson Prize

Scripps Research team identifies sugar molecules that trigger placental formation

ITU at COP30: Driving Green Digital Action for a sustainable future

Want to be more persuasive? Talk with your hands, UBC study finds

Mount Sinai health system to roll out Microsoft Dragon copilot

Scientists map how the brain develops – and how it resolves inflammation

Triggering cell death in metastatic melanoma may pave the way for new cancer treatments

A path to safer painkillers – revealed by freezing opioids and their protein receptors in motion

Reducing reliance on corticosteroids with rituximab: renewed hope for adult-onset patients with relapsing nephrotic syndrome

Psilocybin outside the clinic – public health challenges of increasing publicity, accessibility, and use

Parent-teen sexual health communication and teens’ health information and service seeking

Two small changes, that may transform agriculture

New brain atlas offers unprecedented detail in MRI scans

Two main gene discovery methods reveal complementary aspects of biology

Blocking key protein triggers cancer cell self-destruction

Proposed all-climate battery design could unlock stability in extreme temps

Princeton’s new quantum chip built for scale

High risk of suicide after involuntary psychiatric care

From degradation to restoration: Remote sensing tracks Asia’s struggle for sustainable drylands

[Press-News.org] The garden microbe with a sense of touch