(Press-News.org)
How can bacteria squeeze through spaces narrower than a human hair is thick? A research team in Japan led by Dr. Daisuke Nakane and Dr. Tetsuo Kan at the University of Electro-Communications, Dr. Hirofumi Wada at Ritsumeikan University, and Dr. Yoshitomo Kikuchi at National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology have revealed the answer: they drill their way through.
The study, published in Nature Communications, shows that certain symbiotic bacteria wrap their rotating flagella—the helical tails used for swimming—around their cell bodies to form a “screw thread.” This configuration lets them propel forward through one-micrometer-wide passages, such as those inside insect guts, that would otherwise trap or immobilize them.
To visualize this remarkable motion, the researchers built a quasi-one-dimensional microfluidic device that reproduces the geometry of an insect’s gut “sorting organ.” Under the microscope, bacteria called Caballeronia insecticola were seen advancing smoothly through the narrow channels by repeatedly wrapping and unwrapping their flagella. In contrast, related species that could not perform this wrapping remained stuck.
Computer simulations confirmed the physical advantage of the wrapping mode: in confined spaces, normal flagellar rotation simply stirs the fluid, while wrapping flagella efficiently generates its propulsion in the walls like a rotating corkscrew, efficiently pushing the cell forward.
The team further demonstrated that a flexible joint known as the hook, which connects the flagellar motor to its filament, is key to enabling this motion. When researchers swapped the hook genes from a “wrapping” species to a “non-wrapping” species, the ability to move through confined spaces—and even to infect their host insects—was lost accordingly.
This discovery highlights a new physical survival strategy among bacteria, revealing how simple microorganisms can exploit mechanical principles to navigate complex environments. Beyond its biological significance, understanding these micro-scale drilling motions may inspire microrobots capable of moving through viscous or crowded environments such as tissues or filtration systems.
“Flagellar wrapping shows how life solves mechanical problems in elegant, unexpected ways,” says Dr. Nakane. “It’s a microscopic version of engineering ingenuity, evolved by nature itself.”
END
LOGAN, Utah, USA — A recent critique from a team led by Utah State University ecologist Dan MacNulty and published in Forest Ecology and Management has prompted a formal correction to a high-profile study on aspen recovery while raising broader questions about how scientific conclusions are drawn and defended in complex ecological systems.
The original study, published last year by Luke Painter and colleagues, concluded that restoration of large carnivores — including the reintroduction of wolves in the mid-1990s — triggered a strong, ecologically significant trophic cascade that fostered widespread recovery of aspen trees in northern Yellowstone. Central to their evidence ...
Gaps in the nation’s stroke transfer system are drastically reducing survivors’ chances of receiving critical treatment and increasing the likelihood that they will leave the hospital with a disability, a new study suggests.
Around one-third of ischemic stroke survivors are eligible for endovascular thrombectomy, an effective intervention that changed the landscape of stroke treatment more than a decade ago.
More than 40% of people who receive endovascular therapy are initially seen at hospitals that don’t offer the treatment. These patients require transfer to more advanced facilities capable of delivering thrombectomy.
New findings published in The Lancet ...
Gaps in the U.S. stroke transfer system are drastically reducing survivors’ chances of receiving critical treatment and increasing the likelihood that they will leave the hospital with a disability, according to a new study published in The Lancet Neurology.
Around one-third of ischemic stroke patients are eligible for endovascular thrombectomy, an effective intervention that changed the landscape of stroke treatment more than a decade ago.
More than 40% of people who receive endovascular therapy initially arrive at hospitals that don’t offer the treatment. These patients require transfer to more advanced facilities capable of delivering ...
The long term use of proton pump inhibitors (PPIs), a class of drugs widely used to treat acid reflux and ulcers, may not be linked to any increased risk of developing gastric (stomach) cancer, finds a study of Nordic health data published by The BMJ today.
This finding should offer relief for patients needing long term proton pump inhibitor therapy and is valuable for clinical decision making in healthcare settings, say the researchers.
A fear that proton pump inhibitors could lead to stomach cancer has been ongoing since the 1980s. Recent research has linked their use to around a twofold increased risk, but ...
Offering non-monetary incentives such as free access to outpatient consultations to frequent blood donors is linked to an increase in donations without compromising blood safety, finds a study from China published by The BMJ today.
The researchers say their findings could encourage policymakers in other countries to design their own incentive models to address blood shortages.
Many countries, particularly developing ones, struggle to sustain an adequate blood supply due to challenges of retaining blood donors under the “gift model” - a ...
Natural ovulation before frozen embryo transfer is as effective as hormone treatment for achieving a healthy baby by vitro fertilisation (IVF), finds a clinical trial from China published by The BMJ today.
Natural ovulation is also linked to a lower risk of several complications for the mother, such as pre-eclampsia (abnormally high blood pressure), the results show.
Globally, the use of frozen embryo transfer after IVF has increased substantially and accounts for more than 60% of all embryo transfers.
Doctors prepare the womb lining (endometrium) for frozen ...
A major UK clinical trial has shown that adding the corticosteroid dexamethasone to standard antiviral treatment for encephalitis (brain inflammation), caused by herpes simplex virus (HSV) does not improve long-term outcomes overall, although early use may lead to better recovery, and the treatment is safe for patients in whom encephalitis is suspected.
The DexEnceph study, led by researchers at The Pandemic Institute, the University of Liverpool, and Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust in partnership with Encephalitis International and research teams around the country, provides the most definitive evidence so far on whether corticosteroids should be used ...
Severe vitamin D deficiency is associated with a higher rate of hospitalisation for respiratory tract infections such as bronchitis and pneumonia, according to a new study led by the University of Surrey. Scientists found that those with a severe deficiency (below 15 nnmol/L) were 33 per cent more likely to be admitted to hospital for treatment than those with sufficient levels of vitamin D (at least 75 nmol/L).
In the largest study of its kind, analysing NHS data from the UK Biobank, researchers from Surrey, in collaboration with the University of Reading ...
There has been a lasting and disproportionate impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on diagnosis rates for conditions including depression, asthma and osteoporosis.
Depression is the most severely impacted, with almost a third fewer diagnoses than expected compared with pre-pandemic trends.
The King’s College London study is the first to evaluate whether diagnosis rates have recovered after emerging from the pandemic. Published today in the British Medical Journal (BMJ), it uses anonymised data from over 29 million people in England.
The pandemic had an unprecedented impact on healthcare systems around the world, leading to abrupt decreases ...
A 66 million-year-old mystery behind how our planet transformed from a tropical greenhouse to the ice-capped world of today has been unravelled by scientists.
Their new study has revealed that Earth’s massive drop in temperature after the dinosaurs went extinct could have been caused by a large decrease in calcium levels in the ocean.
An international team of experts led by the University of Southampton discovered that concentrations of calcium in the sea dropped by more than half across the last 66 million years.
The ...