Bacteria More Virulent in Microgravity 64
Tortured Potato writes "Did you know that salmonella become more virulent in simulated microgravity? No one's sure why, either. Professor Cheryl Nickerson of Tulane University is hoping to find out why when an experiment with brewer's yeast gets sent up on a Russian Progress rocket to the Space Station next year."
This isnt the smartest question ever posed... (Score:5, Interesting)
Would it's ability to be more virulent possibly come from it's relative ease of travel with no gravity? Like somehow gravity 'slows' the virus down when it's on the planet or something...ok...this is where i trail off...
Go gentle on me.
Re:This isnt the smartest question ever posed... (Score:3, Interesting)
Relax, you still got insightful.
"it's relative ease of travel with no gravity"
Or bifurcation in three dimensions being a darn sight easier than in two dimensions and lacking any downward pressure on the cytoplasm meaning that a simple organism can redirect resources to it's primary function, reproduction...
Empiricism gets really silly when they start going for the showy experiments. For example, is this limited to Salmonella, or do all bacteria show the same incre
Re:This isnt the smartest question ever posed... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:This isnt the smartest question ever posed... (Score:2)
a) It were a virus; it's a bacteria. Virus don't move about by themselves.
b) Gravity was thought to have much effect on things this small in a liquid medium - they are neutrally boyant and really, really light.
c) You could spell "its".
Volunteers needed? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just don't overdo it (Score:1)
uGuBrewSky (Score:1)
PARENT POST IS A TROLL (Score:1)
It would also help to explain the explosion of STD's in the Ann Arbor MI area.
Obviously not in article.
Space...the next brewery (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Space...the next brewery (Score:2)
Great. It's fricken neoliberals like you who want nothing more than to see good ole American beverage manufacturing jobs disappear, outsourced to some cheap soulless outer-space assembly line mega-breweries.
At least now I start understanding why everyone and their mom is so keen on sending people into orbit these days.
No telling the sort of danger we'll face, with a bunch of hammered austronauts tear-assing around the space lanes. "Welcome aboard the USS Bob & Doug McKenzie"...
Re:Space...the next brewery (Score:1)
"Space... the final brewery..."
Recipe for disaster? (Score:2)
You have to wonder if a russian rocket in outer space is the safest place for a "brewer's yeast experiment".
(apologies to russian readers for blatent stereotyping ;-)
Re:Recipe for disaster? (Score:2)
Re:Recipe for disaster? (Score:1)
Re:Recipe for disaster? (Score:2)
(no, really.. I got the joke.. russians.. vodka.. all that. very amusing. Doesn't mean I can't make another unrelated one, does it?)
Re:Recipe for disaster? (Score:1)
Simulated Microgravity? (Score:3, Insightful)
Just wondering...
Re:Simulated Microgravity? (Score:2)
Drop something. Between the time taken to drop and hit something, you have microgravity.
Re:Simulated Microgravity? (Score:1)
Dropping the petri dish a few meters isn't going to give you that kind of time in a micro gravitational climate. Heck, even if you commision the aforementioned V.C. and send the micro-beasties on a 10-day sinusoidal roller-coaster ride, you're really assaying for vir
Re:Simulated Microgravity? (Score:3, Informative)
You're not wrong, but one method is through electronic suspension of liquids...another is using shearing forces on rotating cylinders.
I'd look for references, but I'm on my way home.
Re:Simulated Microgravity? (Score:2, Informative)
Still not convinced that cells in a rotating bio-reactor are a good model for cells in an in vivo micro-gravitati
Simulated Microgravity & cost (Score:2)
Actually, the whole thing is discussed on the NASA page [nasa.gov].
My question is one of money and priorities. While they're concerned about the shear effects, which don't take place in "real" microgravity, it seems like there would be better uses for the ISS' mass budget than an experiment which can be replicated to a large extent
Re:Simulated Microgravity? From the article (Score:3, Informative)
You use a rotating test chamber as shown in a figure from the fulltext [asm.org]. By rotating the chamber, gavity never acts in the same direction for very long and nothing settles out of solution. A second rotating chamber is oriented to let gravity work, while duplicating the effects of spin.
Personally, I am skeptical that bacteria really experience gravity. Bacteria are too small -- at that scale most "fluids" are effectively the consistency of molasses in January. I wonder if som
Re:Simulated Microgravity? (Score:1)
Re:Simulated Microgravity? (Score:1)
Relating to the layperson (Score:2)
Yet both of the articles use the term "virulent" to describe a bacteria.
Technically it's not wrong, but it's not real smart either. The world of biology needs an Asimov in my opinion. But what we continue to get are cross-eyed terms like "virulent bacteria", and/or sensationalist writing styles which conjure up images of mad scientists
Re:Relating to the layperson (Score:3, Informative)
From m-w.com:
Main Entry: virulent
Pronunciation: -l&nt
Function: adjective
Etymology: Middle English, from Latin virulentus, from viruspoison
Date: 14th century
1 a : marked by a rapid, severe, and malignant course b : able to overcome bodily defensive mechanisms
2 : extremely poisonous or venomous
3 : full of malice : MALIGNANT
4 : objectionably harsh or strong
- virulently adverb
Virulent, as applied to bacteria, refers to its propensity to a) multiply quickly b) infect a host effici
Re:Relating to the layperson (Score:3, Informative)
It had one, his name was Isaac Asimov: Phd in microbiology.
Now you know : )
Re:Relating to the layperson (Score:2)
Oh come on it's obvious (Score:2)
Re:Oh come on it's obvious (Score:1)
Re:Oh come on it's obvious (Score:2)
This brings the question... (Score:3, Insightful)
All in the name of curing a bacterial infection...
Just a thought...
Re:This brings the question... (Score:2)
Re:This brings the question... (Score:3, Funny)
High g forces will kill a bacterium. One technique sometimes used in biology labs to extract the content of cells is centrifugation--fifteen thousand gees for a handful of minutes will crush most cells and let you get at the goodness inside.
This technique is not recommended for killing bacteria inside a living person, however. Pulping patients is a practice generally frowned upon by the medical profession.
The few gees that a heal
Re:This brings the question... (Score:2)
Artificial Gravity (Score:3, Interesting)
I would love to know why some of the effort being spent on watching things get sick in 0g isn't being directed to something as simple as spinning a glorified beer keg in orbit with some mice in it.
Can someone tell me why this isn't being done?
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:1)
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:2)
Actually, it is. Forgive me for not recalling the link, and possibly being wrong about the nation involved, but I believe Japan has provided a small rotating cylinder for the ISS to perform low-G experiments.
It might not sound too high-tech, but I believe it took some excellent and delicate engineering to keep the thing perfectly balanced while allowing internal objects to move about freely.
Quite a bit is already known about using rotating rings to produce AG, including the fact that it takes a very long
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:2)
Coriolis forces and differential gravity. In order for you to not get dizzy from simply standing up, a spinning habitat with a 1G environment needs to be almost a mile in diameter.
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:2)
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:2)
Because the craft has to be large enough that it can spin at less than (IIRC) 3RPM and still produce significant gravity. Extended duration spin rates greater than that level produce noticeable nausea and balance problems in 90% of the population. In addition, spinning the craft complicates docking, adds weir
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:2)
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:1)
Re:Artificial Gravity (Score:2)
Did I say "U.S. Goverment", no, I said "Congress". And while it may seem far fetched, it's the stone cold truth. (They have even written language into several budget bills specifically forbidding NASA spending discretionary monies on projects designed to further the progress of a manned landing effort.) Look up the sad tale of Transhab.
prediction (Score:2, Funny)
Next slashdot article:
Germans initiate a new space program, volunteer additional funding for the ISS.
Control in a centrifuge? (Score:2)
Re:Control in a centrifuge? (Score:3, Informative)
Dumb question (Score:2, Funny)
energy? (Score:1, Interesting)
energy crawling around and can concentrate
more on reproducing (energy wise
prolly all da cell functions are also
more efficient because 70-90% of a cell
is water and in mcrogravity the molecules
are better "lubricated" / less friction