 
Real super-bugs can save the planet - Microbiology Today:
November 2004 issue
26 October 2004
Beneficial bacteria have fast-tracked evolution to solve some
of our pollution problems, according to an article in the November
2004 issue of Microbiology Today, the quarterly magazine of the
Society for General Microbiology. Using the same mechanisms that
have allowed hospital superbugs to survive in the presence of
antibiotics, many bacteria have changed their behaviour and now
use our toxic chemicals as a source of food.
Researchers at the University of Wales Bangor have studied the
way that bacteria share DNA in order to adapt and survive by using,
and so degrade, synthetic chemicals, like dyes and solvents, released
into the environment. These moveable pieces of DNA, called plasmids,
can be easily passed between bacteria of the same and often very
different species.
"Modern industry releases many synthetic chemicals into
the environment which are hazardous to us, our livestock and crops,"
explains Professor Peter Williams. However, many bacteria are
dealing with this problem and removing these substances. Bacteria
are using genes that they already had for degrading natural waste
materials and exchanging and rearranging them amongst themselves.
"This movement of genes is essentially the same as that which
drives the evolution of antibiotic resistant bacteria in hospitals
with its associated hazards, but in this case the result is beneficial
and produces bacteria that can clean potential pollution from the
environment. These bacteria are the real superbugs," says Professor
Williams.
Microbiologists confront evolution in action on a daily basis
in their work. Microbes resistant to antimicrobial agents have
emerged through mutation or by acquiring protective genes from
other microbes. Gene swapping or genetic reassortment allows viruses
to stay one step ahead of the immune system. Natural selection
lets individuals within a microbial community adapt and survive
in a new environment or experiment.
Other features in the November 2004 issue of Microbiology Today
include:
· Microbial evolution in action (page 158)
· Bacterial populations adapt - genetically, by natural
selection - even in the lab! (page 160)
· RNA viruses - evolution in action (page 163)
· The evolution of antifungal resistance in Candida species
(page 166)
· Serial endosymbiotic theory (SET) and composite individuality
(page 172)
These are just some of the articles that appear, together with
all the regular features and reports of Society activities.
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