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Bacteria Used to Create Nanowires

FnH writes "Derek Lovley and his colleagues of the University of Massachusetts discovered that the Geobacter bacteria is capable of producing nanowires. The bacteria is normally used to clean up toxic waste. Geobacter does not use oxygen, but metal as its source for power. This probably explains the 3nm to 5nm nanowires it excretes while working. What metal the nanowires are made of is not yet known, but the genetic code responsible for their creation is. This opens up the possibility of modifying the bacteria to create nanowires on chips."

8 of 188 comments (clear)

  1. The bacteria "link up" with each other by ReformedExCon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    According to the article, the bacteria seem to produce these tiny wires which then carry electrical signals across large meshes of bacteria-produced wires. It would be interesting to see what sort of emergent behavior, if any, would arise from very large meshes of these wires and bacteria.

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    1. Re:The bacteria "link up" with each other by ReformedExCon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Thank you for the expanded information.

      The original basis for my post was this quote:

      quote
      Patrinos said the bacteria may organize to form minipower grids in the soil by linking up via the nanowires. /quote

      --
      Jesus saved me from my past. He can save you as well.
    2. Re:The bacteria "link up" with each other by Zen+Punk · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Actually, you just made that up. Way to read what isn't there. This qoute might have been the foundation for your extrapolation:

      The ability of the bacteria to link their nanowires has been observed in Lovley's lab. The hairlike wires emanating from the bacteria had been seen previously, but their conducting function was discovered via atomic-force microscope techniques.



      Or perhaps this:

      Patrinos said the bacteria may organize to form minipower grids in the soil by linking up via the nanowires.


      I have no idea what is meant by a "minipower grid" nor what the bacteria in question may be "linking up" to.

      It isn't clear whether he means that a single bacterium can link its own wires together or that several bacteria can link their own respective wires together. Nowhere in the text, however, does it imply that the bacteria send signals of any kind through these wires.
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    3. Re:The bacteria "link up" with each other by k98sven · · Score: 2, Interesting

      we would someday have bacteria that can excrete carbon nanotube

      Well, I think finding any decent catalyst for nanotubes would be a huge breakthrough. The way they're made today is basically by blasting carbon (creating a whole bunch of different crap) and sorting out the bits you want. Not very efficient or controlled.

      or perhaps even Hydrogen gas

      There are already bacteria who produce hydrogen gas. Current research is already trying to do stuff with this. For instance, the EU is funding a project to try and couple this to Photosystem II and have an enzyme which could produce hydrogen gas directly from water and sunlight cheaply and efficiently.

  2. Crystal Ball Hackery by CleverNickedName · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This opens up the possibility of modifying the bacteria to create nanowires on chips.

    In the same was as it opens up the possibility of modifying the bacteria to code Linux kernel patches.
    This certainly is cool biotech, but slapping this wild prediction on to the end of the article doesn't make it more so.

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    Unfortunately, I am not Wil Wheaton
  3. Possible cyberjack material? by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1, Interesting


    Interesting read...the first thing that came to my mind when I read this is that these organic wires may be just the thing for the interface between electronics and organic tisue. One of the major problems in cybernetics is that the chemistry of the implants tends to be poisonous to the surrounding tissue, while the chemistry of the surrounding tisue tends to be corrosive to the implant. Over time, the interface degrades and must eventually be replaced. Utilizing the genetic code from these microbes to express nanowires within some of our cells may eliminate this problem and pave the way for permanent interfaces sooner than we thought.

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  4. Geobacter infected metals by La+Gris · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone else think of roten metals ?

    Geobacter does not use oxigen, but metal as it's source for power

    Now, our cars will not only rust in winter because of salted snow, but they may rot eaten by Geobacter. ;)

    More seriously:
    Could this bacteria be genetically engineered to eat common metals like steel, or more uncommon ones targeted at destroying military or sabotage foundrys?

    Is another bio weapon on the way?

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    Léa Gris
  5. Born from "Star Trek"... by cnelzie · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...the post you were responding to is.

        "It would be just like that one Star Trek Episode where Wesley was doing this experiment with Nanobots that networked together and formed a rudimentary, then more evolved Artificial Intelligence. They like took over Lt. Cmdr. Data and then took over the ship and all they wanted was a chance to have a place of their own, that they could turn into grey ooze." ...or...

        "It could be just like that one Star Trek Episode where there was this terraforming project going on at this lifeless rock and the Enterprise was sent to investigate some terrible disasters that were happening there. It turns out that there were this mircoscopic silicone based lifeforms living in the sands on this planet and they were like, getting killed by the terraforming process. Anyway, the leader of the terraforming colony knew what was going on, he just didn't want to admit that he was killing little silicone sand creatures. The silicone sand creatures networked together and started being all bad-ass as they increased in capability and inteligent as they joined together, kinda like the Constructicons from The Transformers television series, that was cool, you know? So, anyway, these bacteria might be doing the same thing!"

        Anyway, I have to blame Star Trek. While the series has been known to inspire tons of people to do great things, it's pseudo-science has done some harm as people assume that what happens in a Science Fantasy show can happen in real life.

        No hatin' to the original poster, btw. I am just saying.

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