Monday, September 7, 2020

432 - Moses Microbes Maintain Moisture

Gypsum
This episode: Bacteria living in the driest place on earth have ways to extract water from the mineral structures of rocks!

Download Episode (3.7 MB, 5.4 minutes)

Show notes:
Microbe of the episode: Irkut lyssavirus

News item

Takeaways
Microbes living in extremely dry conditions have it tough. Water is important both for the chemistry and structure of all cells. Desert microbes are very good at acquiring and holding on to the water they can find, but in places such as the Atacama Desert in Chile, there's almost none available.

However, microbes can be very resourceful. In this study, phototrophs were discovered that can actually extract water molecules bound up in the crystalline structure of the mineral gypsum, and this allows them to survive in hyperarid regions. They do this by secreting organic acid molecules to etch the rock and release the water, converting gypsum to anhydrite, which is a mineral with the same chemical structure except without the water.

Journal Paper:
Huang W, Ertekin E, Wang T, Cruz L, Dailey M, DiRuggiero J, Kisailus D. 2020. Mechanism of water extraction from gypsum rock by desert colonizing microorganisms. Proc Natl Acad Sci 117:10681–10687.

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