By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
WASHINGTON - The wonderland known as Yellowstone National Park has
yielded a new marvel — an unusual bacterium that converts light to
energy.
The discovery was made in a hot spring at the park where colorful mats
of microbes drift in the warmth.
"This thing was just bizarre," David M. Ward, a professor of microbial
studies at Montana State University, said of the bacterium.
Plants use photosynthesis to turn light into energy, of course, and so
do some other bacteria.
But, Ward said, the newly discovered type has "a new kind of
photosynthesis. It uses the same kind of machinery, but has the parts
in a different arrangement."
The find is going to be important for unraveling the history of
photosynthesis, in determining how microbes efficiently harvest energy,
he said in a telephone interview.
"We're running out of fossil fuel, so the more efficiently we can
harvest light energy the better," Ward said.
Discovery of the microbe, named Candidatus Chloracidobacterium
thermophilum, is reported in Friday's issue of the journal Science.
"Finding a previously unknown, chlorophyll-producing microbe is the
discovery of a lifetime," co-author Don Bryant, a professor of
biotechnology at Penn State University, said in a ... more »
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Friday, July 27
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