Frog Foam Photosynthesis 21
Garrett Fox writes "University of Cincinnati researchers describe a method of getting photosynthesis from a high-surface-area foam containing enzymes that produce sugar using light and CO2 (abstract). Oddly, the foam itself is derived from a species of frog. More interesting is that the technique doesn't use whole cells or apparently even chloroplasts. The researchers claim 'chemical conversion efficiencies approaching 96%,' as well as tolerance for deliberately high-CO2 environments."
Interesting for sealed environments? (Score:1)
I wonder if this has implications for making closed ecological systems easier?
Wikipedia claims that plants only have something like a 3-6% photosynthetic efficiency.
Misleading headline (Score:4, Interesting)
TFA is so brief that we might as well just post it:
We present a cell-free artificial photosynthesis platform that couples the requisite enzymes of the Calvin cycle with a nanoscale photophosphorylation system engineered into a foam architecture using the Tngara frog surfactant protein Ranaspumin-2. This unique protein surfactant allowed lipid vesicles and coupled enzyme activity to be concentrated to the microscale Plateau channels of the foam, directing photoderived chemical energy to the singular purpose of carbon fixation and sugar synthesis, with chemical conversion efficiencies approaching 96%.
If I'm reading that right, the frog connection isn't really part of the photosynthesis cycle. It's there to provide more surface area and channel the various bits of the reaction together, but the reaction itself is well known. It's part of the regular plant-based photosynthesis.
So it's a nice bit of chemical engineering, but the headline "frog foam photosynthesis" is deeply misleading: the frogs don't photosynthesize, and one of their chemicals is being put to a novel purpose.
Re:Misleading headline (Score:5, Informative)
TFA is actually a six-page article behind a paywall, but everyone can get a 13 page PDF with the supplementary information, (most of which is pretty Greek to me as a non-bio geek) behind the "Supporting Info" link [acs.org].
If I read the article correctly, this research group had already got 95% efficiency using a different kind of foam, it's just that this frog-protein-foam enables more sugar to be generated before the foam breaks. OTOH, I'm pretty sure I'm not really qualified to even have an opinion.
And judging from the summary of the article, the researchers are not expecting this to be able to be more efficient than the most efficient plants. So that 95% number is just not comparable to the maybe 10% photosynthetic yield of the best plants from sunlight because it's measuring something different.
Re: (Score:2)
Off topic - I just hate it when we get links like this and further I hate it when the idiot publishers want anywhere between $30 and $50 to just look at a single article. If it was a more reasonable value, say $5, I might just go ahead and pay it - but the current pricing structure is just too steep to make a whole lot of sense.
Re:Misleading headline (Score:5, Funny)
OTOH, I'm pretty sure I'm not really qualified to even have an opinion.
You must be new here.
Here's a longer article from the University (Score:4, Informative)
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YES! That article is definitely interesting. Thanks for posting that.
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first (Score:4, Funny)
you lick the frog...
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
.. licking the frog is ok. You see, we use only the finest baby frogs, dew-picked and flown from Iraq, cleansed in the finest quality spring water, lightly killed, and then sealed in a succulent Swiss quintuple smooth treble cream milk chocolate envelope, and lovingly frosted with glucose.
I guess with this frog-based foam, they've just put the finishing touches on the lightest of sugary whipped fondant frog confection.
Nothing to add but... (Score:1)
average usability time? (Score:1)
If it decays after a couple minutes, I will not be impressed.
Hrm... (Score:2, Insightful)
So frog foam converts light and CO2 into sugar, and yeast converts sugar to alcohol and CO2, it stands to reason that light is alcohol. Now I understand why they call it Light Beer!
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Protip: E = mc^2
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Foam Foam Photosynthesis? (Score:1)
Phenomenally fantastic!
What is the quantum efficiency? (Score:2)