News: Scientists explore new window on the origins of life



Scientists explore new window on the origins of life
February 12th, 2009 in General Science / Biology


(PhysOrg.com) -- The remarkable behaviour of bacteria that have been forced
to live without their protective wall has allowed Newcastle University
scientists to open a new window on the origins of life on earth.

All living cells on the planet go through the process of division in order
to survive and thrive. Cell division, or binary fission, allows one cell to
split down the middle to become two cells.

In the work published in Nature, Newcastle University scientists have found
that under some conditions, including treatment with antibiotics, common
bacteria switch to a whole new way of increasing in number that may have
been used by the first cells to evolve on the planet.

Bacteria have been around for more than two billion years and now occupy
every corner of the environment. The secret of their success seems to be
their tough outer skin or cell wall. This protective barrier can also be a
weakness and is the target for many of our best antibiotics, including
penicillin.

The Newcastle University scientists have found out how to induce a bacterium
to live without a wall. These fragile cells called L-forms, have a wobbly
shape with only a thin surface membrane holding them together. What has
surprised scientists is that the bacteria seem to be pre-prepared to make
this switch to life without a wall.

The scientists believe that the bacteria kept this ability as a way of
surviving attacks on their wall that have been happening since the earliest
life-form but now happen regularly when patients are treated with
antibiotics.

Now that L-forms can be studied more closely the Newcastle University team
led by Professor Jeff Errington has found the drug-resistant bacteria are
multiplying in a way which has never been seen before.

Instead of dividing in two, the L-form bacterium pulsates and then 'squirts
out babies', sometimes as many as five new bacteria each time. This was
completely unexpected.

In the work the team describe how they made the L-forms and the simple
genetic changes that happened in the cells when they adapted themselves to
life without a wall.

"What we have uncovered seems to be a primitive mode of growth probably used
by the very earliest cells on the planet," says Professor Errington,
Director of the Institute for Cell and Molecular Biosciences at Newcastle
University.

"All modern bacteria are used to living inside their wall which is a great
sheltered place to be but it's an engineering feat to be able to expand it,
keeping it intact at all times and then pinch it off into two. We now think
that before the wall was invented, very early in evolution, cells used this
squirting method to increase in number."

During the research funded by the BBSRC, the scientists for the first time
witnessed and were able to video the L-form bacteria multiplying.

The team now intend to work on understanding how the mechanism works that
squirts the bacteria out, which might be important for combating some forms
of antibiotic resistance, as well as providing powerful new experimental
tools for studying the all important cell wall.

More information: Life without a wall or division machine in Bacillus
subtilis. M. Leaver, P. Dominguez-Cuevas, J.M. Coxhead, R.A. Daniel and J.
Errington. Nature doi:10.1038/nature07742

Provided by Newcastle University
http://www.physorg.com/news153675828.html

Posted by
Robert Karl Stonjek


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