. Solar Energy News .




.
FLORA AND FAUNA
Do Bacteria Age? Biologists Discover the Answer Follows Simple Economics
by Kim McDonald
San Diego CA (SPX) Nov 09, 2011

File image.

When a bacterial cell divides into two daughter cells and those two cells divide into four more daughters, then 8, then 16 and so on, the result, biologists have long assumed, is an eternally youthful population of bacteria. Bacteria, in other words, don't age-at least not in the same way all other organisms do.

But a study conducted by evolutionary biologists at the University of California, San Diego questions that longstanding paradigm.

In a paper published in the journal Current Biology, they conclude that not only do bacteria age, but that their ability to age allows bacteria to improve the evolutionary fitness of their population by diversifying their reproductive investment between older and more youthful daughters. An advance copy of the study appears this week in the journal's early online edition.

"Aging in organisms is often caused by the accumulation of non-genetic damage, such as proteins that become oxidized over time," said Lin Chao, a professor of biology at UC San Diego who headed the study.

"So for a single celled organism that has acquired damage that cannot be repaired, which of the two alternatives is better-to split the cellular damage in equal amounts between the two daughters or to give one daughter all of the damage and the other none?"

The UC San Diego biologists' answer-that bacteria appear to give more of the cellular damage to one daughter, the one that has "aged," and less to the other, which the biologists term "rejuvenation"-resulted from a computer analysis Chao and colleagues Camilla Rang and Annie Peng conducted on two experimental studies.

Those studies, published in 2005 and 2010, attempted unsuccessfully to resolve the question of whether bacteria aged. While the 2005 study showed evidence of aging in bacteria, the 2010 study, which used a more sophisticated experimental apparatus and acquired more data than the previous one, suggested that they did not age.

"We analyzed the data from both papers with our computer models and discovered that they were really demonstrating the same thing," said Chao. "In a bacterial population, aging and rejuvenation goes on simultaneously, so depending on how you measure it, you can be misled to believe that there is no aging."

In a separate study, the UC San Diego biologists filmed populations of E. coli bacteria dividing over hundreds of generations and confirmed that the sausage-shaped bacteria divided each time into daughter cells that grew elongated at different rates-suggesting that one daughter cell was getting all or most of the cellular damage from its mother while the other was getting little or none.

"We ran computer models and found that giving one daughter more the damage and the other less always wins from an evolutionary perspective," said Chao. "It's analogous to diversifying your portfolio.

If you could invest $1 million at 8 percent, would that provide you with more money than splitting the money and investing $500,000 at 6 percent and $500,000 at 10 percent?"

"After one year it makes no difference," he added.

"But after two years, splitting the money into the two accounts earns you more and more money because of the compounding effect of the 10 percent. It turns out that bacteria do the same thing. They give one daughter a fresh start, which is the higher interest-bearing account and the other daughter gets more of the damage."

Although E. coli bacteria appear to divide precisely down the middle into two daughter cells, the discovery that the two daughters eventually grow to different lengths suggests that bacteria do not divide as symmetrically as most biologists have come to believe, but that their division is really "asymmetrical" within the cell.

"There must be an active transport system within the bacterial cell that puts the non-genetic damage into one of the daughter cells," said Chao.

"We think evolution drove this asymmetry. If bacteria were symmetrical, there would be no aging. But because you have this asymmetry, one daughter by having more damage has aged, while the other daughter gets a rejuvenated start with less damage."

Related Links
University of California, San Diego
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



FLORA AND FAUNA
Nepal children to track elusive snow leopard
Kathmandu (AFP) Nov 8, 2011
Conservationists in Nepal have enlisted an army of school children to record the movements of the mysterious snow leopard, one of the most elusive predators in the world, a scientist said Tuesday. Experts believe just 500 adults survive in the Himalayan nation, and few can claim ever to have seen the secretive, solitary "mountain ghost", which lives 5,000 to 6,000 metres (16,500 to 20,000 ft ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
A Stable Renewable Fuel Standard Is Needed to Meet Biofuel Production Goals

Mission Increases Jatropha Oil Supply Completing the 2011 Planting Season

Wood biofuel could be a competitive industry by 2020

Giant King Grass Targeted as Fuel for Planned 90MW Biomass Power Plant in Thailand

FLORA AND FAUNA
Mask-bot: A robot with a human face

NASA Robotic Lander Test Flight Will Aid in Future Lander Designs

Is that a robot in your suitcase?

Look, no hands -- robot uses gecko power to climb walls

FLORA AND FAUNA
Mortenson Construction Builds Its Fifth Wind Facility In Illinois

Chinese Wind Market To Overtake Germany by 2018, Second Only to the UK

Huhne slams green energy 'naysayers'

Wind farm development can be powerful, as long as proper design is implemented

FLORA AND FAUNA
China auto sales down 1.1% in October

Toyota profits fall, scraps forecast on Thai floods

GM's cloud over Chinese Saab rescue 'regrettable': Sweden

GM would cut business with Chinese-owned Saab

FLORA AND FAUNA
Security risks curb Libyan oil recovery

US climate study group gets big oil funds

Building a full-scale model of a trapped oil reservoir in a laboratory

Green Heat: GE Pulls Power Out of Hot Air

FLORA AND FAUNA
Graphene grows better on certain copper crystals

New method of growing high-quality graphene promising for next-gen technology

Giant flakes make graphene oxide gel

Amorphous diamond, a new super-hard form of carbon created under ultrahigh pressure

FLORA AND FAUNA
Individual CO2 emissions decline in old age

Australia approves carbon tax

Greenpeace protests 'climate killer' coal plant in S.Africa

Creating markets to pay for public good offer promise, peril

FLORA AND FAUNA
Holm oaks will gain ground in northern forests due to climate change

Climate change causing massive movement of tree species across the West

Tropical forests are fertilized by air pollution

DR Congo seeks to keep its huge green lung breathing


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement