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

Swedish freshwater bacteria give new insights into bacterial evolution

2025-12-12
(Press-News.org)

Bacteria are among the most diverse and ancient forms of life on Earth. Yet, much of what we know about them comes from a small group of species, mostly studied for their roles in human health.

“The vast majority of bacterial species remain unexplored, and this really limits our understanding of how bacteria shape ecosystems and have evolved to thrive in different environments,” says Joel Hallgren, lead author of the study.

Most bacteria reproduce through simple, symmetrical cell division. However, members of one distinctive group, the Caulobacterales, known for their “stalked” appearance, deviate from this pattern. They have a more complex lifecycle, involving asymmetric cell division that results in two distinct cell types: one mobile and explorative, and the other sessile and reproductive. The evolutionary reasons behind this complex lifecycle have long puzzled scientists. Caulobacterales bacteria are also known to be environmentally widespread and are thought to be important degraders of plant matter in nature, but their ecology and evolution have remained poorly studied.

Researchers at Stockholm University analyzed the DNA of all known Caulobacterales species, including newly collected samples from Swedish and Finnish forest lakes. They discovered that several freshwater species lacked more than a hundred genes typically linked to the group’s complex lifecycle. These bacteria represent three new species in a previously unknown genus, which the team named Acaudatibacter, Latin for “bacterium without a tail.”

Intriguingly, another soil Caulobacterales member, isolated in Ecuador, also lacked the same set of lifecycle genes and, as the researchers observed by microscopy, reproduces through simple, symmetric cell division. This independent loss of complexity in separate lineages provides insight into the set of genes essential for the complex lifecycles of bacteria.

“It’s fascinating to see that evolution has reversed lifecycle complexity multiple times in the same way,” says Joel Hallgren. “It gives us a unique genetic signature of how complexity arises, and disappears, during the evolution of bacterial lifecycles.”

The researchers also made another unexpected discovery: the Swedish lake bacteria possessed all the genes required for photosynthesis, a capability not previously known in Caulobacterales, highlighting that photosynthesis is more widespread among bacteria than previously thought. Indeed, further analysis revealed that roughly 10% of species in this group carry genes for harvesting light energy.

“It’s exciting that novel bacterial species from my own country are giving us new perspectives on fundamental concepts in microbiology,” says Hallgren.

The study was a close interdisciplinary collaboration between two research groups at Stockholm University, both based at SciLifeLab, a national infrastructure for life sciences, when the work began.

“This project combined my lab’s expertise in bacterial cell biology and genetics with the strong microbial genomics and ecology expertise of Sarahi Garcia’s group,” says senior author Kristina Jonas. “Our affiliation with SciLifeLab and the flexible funding it provided made it possible for us to explore this new research direction.”

 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Global measures consistently underestimate food insecurity; one in five who suffer from hunger may go uncounted

2025-12-12
URBANA, Ill. — International humanitarian aid organizations rely on analyses from the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) system, a global partnership that monitors and classifies the severity of food insecurity to help target assistance where and when it is most needed. Those analyses are multifaceted and complex – often taking place in regions where data is scarce and conditions are deteriorating – and stakeholders tend to assume they overestimate need. However, a new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and collaborators, published in Nature Food, finds the opposite is the case: global food insecurity analyses systematically ...

Hidden patterns of isolation and segregation found in all American cities

2025-12-12
UCL Press Release Under embargo until Friday 12 December 2025, 10:00 UK time / 05:00 US Eastern time   Hidden patterns of isolation and segregation found in all American cities A comprehensive analysis of 383 U.S. cities reveals a striking pattern: most have rings of isolation in suburban areas and segregated pockets of near the urban core, that are shaped by race, wealth, and proximity to downtown, finds a new study by UCL researchers. Published in Nature Cities, the paper analyses the daily movements of people in cities right ...

FDA drug trials exclude a widening slice of Americans

2025-12-12
A new study finds just 6% of clinical trials used to approve new drugs in the U.S. reflect the country’s racial and ethnic makeup, with an increasing trend of trials underrepresenting Black and Hispanic individuals. The findings arrive amidst a push for personalized medicine, which creates treatments designed specifically for an individual’s genetic makeup.  Researchers at UC Riverside and UC Irvine examined data from 341 pivotal trials—the large, final-stage studies used to gain FDA approval for new drugs—between ...

Sea reptile’s tooth shows that mosasaurs could live in freshwater

2025-12-12
Mosasaurs, giant marine reptiles that existed more than 66 million years ago, lived not only in the sea but also in rivers. This is shown by new research based on analyses of a mosasaur tooth found in North Dakota and believed to belong to an animal that could reach a length of 11 metres. The study, conducted by an international team of researchers led from Uppsala University, shows that mosasaurs adapted to riverine environments in the final million years before they became extinct. In 2022, palaeontologists found a large tooth from a mosasaur in North Dakota. It was ...

Pure bred: New stem cell medium only has canine components

2025-12-12
Canine induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells possess the ability to differentiate into any type of cell, making them a useful tool for investigating common canine diseases and disease states, including those of humans. When culturing iPS cells, a culture substrate is required to serve as a scaffold for the cells, which adhere to it and proliferate. Without the scaffold, the cells die or fail to differentiate. Currently, recombinant proteins derived primarily from humans are used as culture substrates for canine iPS cells. However, these human-derived ...

Largest study of its kind highlights benefits – and risks – of plant-based diets in children

2025-12-12
Vegetarian and vegan diets can support healthy growth when carefully planned with appropriate supplementation, finds a major new meta-analysis – the most comprehensive study to-date of plant-based diets in children. A team of researchers, from Italy, USA and Australia, analysed data from over 48,000 children and adolescents worldwide who followed different dietary patterns, examining health outcomes, growth and nutritional adequacy. They found that vegan and vegetarian diets can be nutrient-rich and support healthy growth, but also carry a risk of deficiencies if key nutrients are not obtained through fortified ...

Synergistic effects of single-crystal HfB2 nanorods: Simultaneous enhancement of mechanical properties and ablation resistance

2025-12-12
Background Ultra-high temperature ceramics (UHTCs), with their exceptional high-temperature stability, oxidation resistance, and ablation resistance, have become key materials for the thermal protection systems of hypersonic vehicles. However, ceramic materials constructed from traditional polycrystalline boride powders exhibit inherent defects under extreme service environments: grain boundaries, acting as preferential active regions for oxidation reactions and rapid diffusion channels for oxygen atoms, tend to trigger localized oxidation that spreads inward, ultimately leading to material structural damage and functional failure. ...

Mysterious X-ray variability of the strongly magnetized neutron star NGC 7793 P13

2025-12-12
When gas falls onto a compact object, such as a neutron star or black hole, due to its strong gravity (a process called accretion), it emits electromagnetic waves. High-sensitivity observations have discovered objects with extremely high X-ray luminosities. One possible explanation for the ultraluminosity is that an extraordinary amount of gas falls onto a compact object through a process called supercritical accretion. However, the mechanism of supercritical accretion remains unclear. The research team focused on NGC 7793 P13 (hereafter, P13), which is a neutron star in supercritical accretion, ...

The key to increasing patients’ advance care medical planning may be automatic patient outreach

2025-12-12
A strategy for advance care planning (ACP) that included automated outreach from staff who contacted patients to offer assistance significantly boosted the number of patients who completed documentation outlining their wishes in times of serious illness, new research finds. People with serious illnesses should discuss their medical care wishes with families and doctors, said Dr. Neil Wenger, professor of medicine in the division of general internal medicine and health services research at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the study’s senior author. But these conversations are not always easy, particularly for primary care doctors who are busy with other clinical ...

Palaeontology: Ancient tooth suggests ocean predator could hunt in rivers

2025-12-12
A 66-million-year-old tooth discovered in North Dakota, USA, suggests that some mosasaurs — extinct lizard-like reptiles that could grow up to 12 metres long — may have hunted in rivers as well as seas. The authors suggest that the findings, which are published in BMC Zoology, may represent the first evidence of a mosasaur hunting freshwater prey in Hell Creek at this time. Melanie During, Nathan Van Vranken, and colleagues examined the tooth after it was discovered in 2022 in the Hell Creek Formation in North Dakota, USA, in a river-like area formerly connected to an ancient sea known as the Western Interior ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Novel high-entropy strategy boosts energy storage and enables ultrafast discharge in advanced ceramics

From trial-and-error to intelligent design: Machine Learning boosts a breakthrough in the performance of BaTiO3-based High-Entropy energy-storage ceramics

Traditional Chinese medicine in febrile neutropenia treatment: advances and prospects

Novel tantalate high-entropy ceramics coatings achieve breakthrough thermal barrier performance at 1500 °C

JMIR Publications welcomes Dr. Sara Simblett as Editor in Chief of JMIR Neurotechnology

SwRI to characterize new inspection methods for Air Force aircraft

AI gets a D: Study shows inaccuracies, inconsistency in ChatGPT answers

FAU researchers find concerning rise in US teen obesity over a decade

New study offers insight into tissue-specific gene regulation of sheep

Researchers find low response rate by clinicians to elevated levels of Lp(a)

Jeonbuk National University researchers develop clustering-based framework for water level forecasting

Reduced air pollution from climate mitigation could boost crop yields and lower hunger risk

Scientists reveal a new class of molten planet

Plastic bottles transformed into Parkinson’s drug using bacteria

New alliance clinical trial aims to improve outcomes in brain tumors

Intensive therapy approaches benefit infants and toddlers with cerebral palsy

National Poll: 1 in 3 parents fear their teen or young adult could cause a crash

New study maps cellular mechanisms driving fibrosis in Crohn's Disease

Novel cancer drug delivery system improves Paclitaxel absorption

New deep learning framework solves the cold-start problem

Extending monitoring period for severe pregnancy complications shows more than 40% of cases previously missed

Maternal race and immigration linked to obstetric trauma: higher risk among Asian mothers and Black immigrant/refugee mothers

Consistency over perfection, new resistance-training guidelines say

Timely scan could save lives of A&E patients with blood in urine

Prostate cancer screening as good as breast cancer screening, say researchers

AI expert and industry leading toxicologist Thomas Hartung hails launch of agentic AI platform a “transformative moment” in chemical safety science

The RESIL-Card tool launches across Europe to strengthen cardiovascular care preparedness against crises

Tools to glimpse how “helicity” impacts matter and light

Smartphone app can help men last longer in bed

Longest recorded journey of a juvenile fisher to find new forest home

[Press-News.org] Swedish freshwater bacteria give new insights into bacterial evolution