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20 THINGS YOU DIDNT KNOW ABOUT BACTERIA

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Title: 20 THINGS YOU DIDNT KNOW ABOUT BACTERIA


1
20 THINGS YOU DIDNT KNOW ABOUT BACTERIA
An article by Jocelyn Rice in Discover Magazine
December 2008.
2
  • 1. At about 5 million trillion trillion strong,
    bacteria and their cousins, the archaea, vastly
    outnumber all other life-forms on earth.

3
  • 2. Lined up end to end, they would stretch some
    10 billion light-years-literally from here to the
    edge of the visible universe.

4
  • 3. And there are always more on the way.
    Pseudomonas natriegens, an ocean-dwelling
    bacterium, can go from birth to reproduction in
    10 minutes flat. In five hours a single cell
    could theoretically give rise to more than 1
    billion offspring.

5
  • 4. Bacteria have been around for at least 3.5
    billion years, making them the oldest known
    life-form on the planet.

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  • 5. Humans didnt catch a glimpse of them, though,
    until 1674, when Dutch scientist Antonie van
    Leeuwenhoek spotted tiny swimming animacules
    while fiddling with the newly invented microscope.

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  • 6. A compelling argument for brushing He
    discovered them while examining pond water and
    scrapings from the human mouth.

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  • 7. Most bacteria have yet to be identified. In
    2003 geneticist J. Craig Venter began trolling
    the high seas and analyzing the water. On his
    first trip he fished out more than a million
    never-before-seen bacterial genes.

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  • 8. The first artificial life-form will be not a
    robot but a bacterium. Not content with finding
    natural bacteria, Venter is leading an effort to
    build a bacterium from scratch.

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  • 9. No escaping them Your body has 10 times more
    bacterial cells than human cells.

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  • 10. Cant catch them either. Whipping their
    tails, E. coli can travel 25 times their own
    length in 1 second, equivalent to a horse running
    135 miles per hour.

http//www.cellsalive.com/animabug.htm
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  • 11. Bacteria have even set up permanent camp
    inside our cells. Mitochondria, the power-houses
    that supply energy to nearly every cell in the
    body, are the descendants of bacteria that were
    engulfed by larger microorganisms billions of
    years ago.

13
  • 12. When you pop a pill to kill off a bad bug,
    you kill some of the good guys, too. A bacterium
    called Clostridium difficile can move into the
    prime intestinal real estate cleared out by
    antibiotics, causing painful inflammation and
    diarrhea.

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  • 13. Bacteria are adept at developing resistance
    to antibiotics. Among the deadliest of resistant
    bacteria is MRSA, which killed 19,000 Americans
    in 2005 alone.

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  • 14. MRSAs deadliness comes in part from a class
    of chemicals known as carotenoids, which MRSA
    uses to fight off our immune systems. Ironically,
    carotenoids are found in many healthy fruits and
    vegetables and may reduce cancer risk.

16
  • 15. But most bacteria are harmless, and some are
    even helpful in aiding our digestion. Mice with
    bacteria-free intestines need to eat 41 percent
    more calories than their germy counterparts.

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  • 16. Floating bacteria are extremely effective at
    spurring condensation, leading to snow and rain.
    Some scientists propose spraying bacteria into
    the clouds to end droughts.

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  • 17. Certain bacteria thrive in extreme
    conditions. In 2006 a probe at a South African
    gold mine turned up bacteria living nearly two
    miles underground, subsisting on the energy given
    off by radioactive rocks.

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  • 18. Another species, Deinococcus radiodurans, can
    survive almost 10,000 times the dose of radiation
    lethal to humans, making it a prime candidate for
    the cleanup of nuclear waste.

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  • 19. The Midas touch Australian scientists found
    that a bacterium called Ralstonia metallidurans
    can turn dissolved gold into solid nuggets.

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  • 20. But can they run Windows/ By programming
    instructions into their genes, scientists have
    engineered E.coli that act like computers,
    assembling into glowing bulls-eye shapes on
    command.
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