 
Glowing Green Slime Shows GM Swaps
08 September 2003
Knowing how bacteria of different types swap genes is vitally
important to regulators trying to decide how safe genetically
modified organisms are, but so far the way genes are transferred
naturally is poorly understood. Research presented today, Monday
8 September 2003, by scientists from the University of Manchester
Institute of Science and Technology at the Society for General
Microbiology's meeting at UMIST provides some of the missing information.
"We all know that bacteria have an incredible ability to
exchange useful bits of DNA and genes between them, leading very
quickly to critical problems like superbug antibiotic resistance
in hospitals," says Dr Johanna Andrews from the Department
of Chemical Engineering at UMIST. "But very few techniques
have been developed to mimic the natural environment and the conditions
in which these swaps actually happen. Which means we know little
about the true causes and mechanics of these transfers."
In the wild many bacteria stick together to produce clumps of
cells when they grow, most often seen as a slime on rotting trees,
round the plughole in your sink, or at the bottom of the refrigerator.
The Manchester scientists have developed a new technique in which
different bacteria that are found in natural communities are forced
to form these slimes in specific areas on glass slides using electric
fields.
"We produced slimes from two different strains of bacteria,
one of which had been tagged with a classic reporter gene, GFP,
the green fluorescent protein which comes from jellyfish,"
says Dr Andrews. "This enabled us to study the transfer of
DNA from one bacterium to another in a natural type of environment".
The scientists hope that their work will contribute to the GM
debate, and eventually lead to safer techniques for producing
GM crops and organisms, reducing the amounts of fertilisers and
pesticides needed to grow our food. Finding ways to reduce the
spread of multiple antibiotic resistant bacteria would also cut
down the number of hospital deaths from general infections.
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