Video Microscopy Unveils the Tricks of Nature's Toughest Glue, Oozed By a Bacterium

Friday, February 10, 2012 - 10:30 in Biology & Nature

Crescent Bacterium Yves Brun, Indiana University/via LiveScience A soybean-shaped bacterium called Caulobacter crescentus, found in freshwater and seawater, makes one of the strongest adhesives in the world. Now high-resolution video microscopy is shedding light on how it can carefully use this adhesive, like a super-precise application of superglue, to stick on surfaces in wet environments. C. crescentus is studied for its interesting cell differentiation properties - it has two daughter stages, swimming around with a little flagellum and then producing a "holdfast," which cements it to aquatic surfaces. This differentiation from flagellum to holdfast makes the organism a useful study subject. But it hasn't been clear just how this holdfast works with such great accuracy. Researchers at Indiana University and Brown University used video microscopy to figure this out. First, the bacterium uses its flagellum as a propulsion device to move around in the water. Then it sheds this stringy...

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