Wednesday, March 22, 2023
  • Contact Us
The Caribbean Post
Advertisement
  • Current News
    • Politics
    • Business
  • Tech News
  • Education
  • Entertainment
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • Health
    • Recipes
  • World
    • Antigua
    • Aruba
    • Barbados
    • Barbuda
    • Dominica
    • Dominican Republic
    • Guadeloupe
    • Guyana
    • Haiti
    • Jamaica
    • St Lucia
    • Suriname
    • Tobago
    • Trinidad
No Result
View All Result
The Caribbean Post
  • Current News
    • Politics
    • Business
  • Tech News
  • Education
  • Entertainment
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • Health
    • Recipes
  • World
    • Antigua
    • Aruba
    • Barbados
    • Barbuda
    • Dominica
    • Dominican Republic
    • Guadeloupe
    • Guyana
    • Haiti
    • Jamaica
    • St Lucia
    • Suriname
    • Tobago
    • Trinidad
No Result
View All Result
The Caribbean Post
No Result
View All Result
Home World Guadeloupe

World’s largest bacteria discovered in Guadeloupe

Staff by Staff
June 24, 2022
in Guadeloupe, World
0
World’s largest bacteria discovered in Guadeloupe
2
SHARES
12
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

You might also like

Letitia Wright receives honorary doctorate from UG, takes Guyana by storm – Caribbean Life

Ramharack, Joseph named in Windies women’s T20 World Cup squad

Keppel O&M To Deliver Guyana’s Third FPSO To SBM Offshore

You can see it with the naked eye and pick it up with a pair of tweezers — not bad for a single bacteria.

Scientists say they have discovered the world’s largest variety in the mangroves of Guadeloupe — and it puts its peers to shame.

At up to two centimetres, “Thiomargarita magnifica” is not only around 5,000 times bigger than most bacteria — it boasts a more complex structure, according to a study published in the journal Science on Thursday.

The discovery “shakes up a lot of knowledge” in microbiology, Olivier Gros, professor of biology at the University of the Antilles and co-author of the study, told AFP.

In his laboratory in the Caribbean island group city of Pointe-a-Pitre, he marvelled at a test tube containing strands that look like white eyelashes.

“At first I thought it was anything but a bacterium because something two centimetres (in size) just couldn’t be one,” he said.

The researcher first spotted the strange filaments in a patch of sulphur-rich mangrove sediment in 2009.

Techniques including electronic microscopy revealed it was a bacterial organism, but there was no guarantee it was a single cell.

‘As tall as Mount Everest’

Molecular biologist Silvina Gonzalez-Rizzo, from the same laboratory, found it belonged to the Thiomargarita family, a bacterial genus known to use sulphides to grow. And a researcher in Paris suggested they were indeed dealing with just one cell.

But a first attempt at publication in a scientific journal a few years later was aborted. 

“We were told: ‘This is interesting, but we lack the information to believe you’,” Gros said, adding that they needed stronger images to provide proof.

Then a young researcher, Jean-Marie Volland, managed to study the bacterium with the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, run by the University of California.

With financial backing and access to some of the best tools in the field, Volland and his colleagues began building up a picture of the colossal bacteria.

It was clearly enormous by bacterial standards — scaled up to human proportions, it would be like meeting someone “as tall as Mount Everest”, Volland said.

Specialist 3D microscope images finally made it possible to prove that the entire filament was indeed a single cell.

But they also helped Volland make a “completely unexpected” discovery.

Normally, a bacterium’s DNA floats freely in the cell. But in the giant species, it is compacted in small structures surrounded by a membrane, he explained.

This DNA compartmentalization is “normally a feature of human, animal and plant cells, complex organisms… but not bacteria,” Volland said.

Future research will have to determine if these characteristics are unique to Thiomargarita magnifica, or if they can be found in other species of bacteria, Gros said.

Credit: Source link

Tags: bacteriadiscoveredGuadeloupeLargestWorlds
Previous Post

Jamaica Women advance to Super50 final after crushing Guyana

Next Post

President Joins UNWTO in Supporting Women Entrepreneurs in the Dominican Republic

Staff

Staff

Related Posts

Letitia Wright receives honorary doctorate from UG, takes Guyana by storm – Caribbean Life
Guyana

Letitia Wright receives honorary doctorate from UG, takes Guyana by storm – Caribbean Life

by Staff
February 2, 2023
Ramharack, Joseph named in Windies women’s T20 World Cup squad
Trinidad

Ramharack, Joseph named in Windies women’s T20 World Cup squad

by Staff
February 2, 2023
Keppel O&M To Deliver Guyana’s Third FPSO To SBM Offshore
Guyana

Keppel O&M To Deliver Guyana’s Third FPSO To SBM Offshore

by Staff
February 2, 2023
Joshua Regrello’s concert is for the culture
Tobago

Joshua Regrello’s concert is for the culture

by Staff
February 2, 2023
Coach Gordon getting U-17s mentally ready | Sports
Guadeloupe

Coach Gordon getting U-17s mentally ready | Sports

by Staff
February 2, 2023
Next Post
President Joins UNWTO in Supporting Women Entrepreneurs in the Dominican Republic

President Joins UNWTO in Supporting Women Entrepreneurs in the Dominican Republic

Recommended

Burgoo Recipe – Immaculate Bites

Burgoo Recipe – Immaculate Bites

July 20, 2022
Southern Pinto Beans Recipe – Immaculate Bites

Southern Pinto Beans Recipe – Immaculate Bites

January 20, 2023

Categories

  • Business (553)
  • Current News (310)
  • Education (28)
  • Entertainment (80)
    • Lifestyle (23)
    • Travel (16)
  • Health (294)
    • Recipes (214)
  • Politics (35)
  • Tech News (75)
  • World (3,474)
    • Antigua (28)
    • Aruba (30)
    • Barbados (28)
    • Barbuda (28)
    • Dominica (29)
    • Dominican Republic (29)
    • Guadeloupe (537)
    • Guyana (880)
    • Haiti (28)
    • Jamaica (28)
    • St Lucia (27)
    • Suriname (28)
    • Tobago (884)
    • Trinidad (889)

Don't miss it

Canada approves increased shipments of potash to Bangladesh
Business

Canada approves increased shipments of potash to Bangladesh

March 22, 2023
Grant funding unlocked for FinTech to solve financial inclusion challenges in Trinidad and Tobago, Eastern Caribbean States
Business

Grant funding unlocked for FinTech to solve financial inclusion challenges in Trinidad and Tobago, Eastern Caribbean States

March 22, 2023
Fried Deviled Eggs – Immaculate Bites
Recipes

Fried Deviled Eggs – Immaculate Bites

March 21, 2023
Crude oil prices could fall further in the coming weeks
Business

Crude oil prices could fall further in the coming weeks

March 21, 2023
Ensure decent work for key workers
Business

Ensure decent work for key workers

March 21, 2023
AOSIS statement on latest IPCC climate science report
Current News

AOSIS statement on latest IPCC climate science report

March 20, 2023
The Caribbean Post

This is an online news portal that aims to share latest news about Africa, Caribbean and other countries of Africa with respect to business, entertainment, breaking updates and stuff like that. Feel free to get in touch!

Categories

  • Business
  • Current News
  • Education
  • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
    • Travel
  • Health
    • Recipes
  • Politics
  • Tech News
  • World
    • Antigua
    • Aruba
    • Barbados
    • Barbuda
    • Dominica
    • Dominican Republic
    • Guadeloupe
    • Guyana
    • Haiti
    • Jamaica
    • St Lucia
    • Suriname
    • Tobago
    • Trinidad

Browse by Tag

announces Barbados Bites Business Caribbean Caribe COVID COVID19 Cup day development Dominica energy food France French gas global Guadeloupe Guyana Guyanas Guyanese Immaculate Jamaica Local man Minister National News oil Online police President Room Route Silicon support team Tobago Tobagos trade Trinidad weather World year

Recent News

Canada approves increased shipments of potash to Bangladesh

Canada approves increased shipments of potash to Bangladesh

March 22, 2023
Grant funding unlocked for FinTech to solve financial inclusion challenges in Trinidad and Tobago, Eastern Caribbean States

Grant funding unlocked for FinTech to solve financial inclusion challenges in Trinidad and Tobago, Eastern Caribbean States

March 22, 2023
Fried Deviled Eggs – Immaculate Bites

Fried Deviled Eggs – Immaculate Bites

March 21, 2023
Crude oil prices could fall further in the coming weeks

Crude oil prices could fall further in the coming weeks

March 21, 2023

2022© Design by CodingBite | Powered by LuxamaMedia.

No Result
View All Result
  • Current News
    • Politics
    • Business
  • Tech News
  • Education
  • Entertainment
    • Travel
    • Lifestyle
  • Health
    • Recipes
  • World
    • Antigua
    • Aruba
    • Barbados
    • Barbuda
    • Dominica
    • Dominican Republic
    • Guadeloupe
    • Guyana
    • Haiti
    • Jamaica
    • St Lucia
    • Suriname
    • Tobago
    • Trinidad

2022© Design by CodingBite | Powered by LuxamaMedia.