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 statement. "I
wouldn't have been as excited if I had reached into that mat and pulled
out a gold nugget the size of my fist!"
Yellowstone is home to many types of heat-loving bacteria and
scientists have studied it for years in search of new organisms that
may be useful in biotechnology or medicine.
Indeed, these ponds have been studied for 40 to 50 years, Ward said,
and yet they can still discover a completely new organism.
The researchers discovered the bacterium living in the same hot springs
where the microbe Thermus aquaticus had been found previously.
T. aquaticus was crucial in making the polymerase chain reaction a
routine procedure. PCR is used to amplify genetic material for testing
and research.
There are other chlorophyl-producing microbes, but the new one — Cab.
thermophilum — is a completely different type than the others that are
known, the researchers said.
The mats of microbes give the Yellowstone hot springs a variety of
colors including yellow, orange, red, brown and green.
Cab. thermophilum grows near the surface of the mats together with
other bacteria or blue-green algae, at a temperature of about 122
degrees to 151 degreesFahrenheit.
It was found in three hot springs, Mushroom Spring, Octopus Spring and
Green Finger Pool in the Lower Geyser Basin.
The researchers said the new bacterium has light-harvesting antennae
known as chlorosomes, which contain about 250,000 chlorophylls each. It
is the first aerobic microbe known to make chlorosomes.
Cab. thermophilum makes two types of chlorophyll that allow these
bacteria to thrive in microbial mats and to compete for light with
other bacteria.
Judging from their genetic sequences, the closest relatives of Cab.
thermophilum are found around Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone and
hot springs in Tibet and Thailand, according to the researchers.
The research was funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S.
Department of Energy.
Original
Source
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