Ridgway Record

World's biggest bacterium found in Caribbean mangrove swamp

- By Christina Larson AP Science Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists have discovered the world's largest bacterium in a Caribbean mangrove swamp.

Most bacteria are microscopi­c, but this one is so big it can be seen with the naked eye.

The thin white filament, approximat­ely the size of a human eyelash, is "by far the largest bacterium known to date," said Jean-Marie Volland, a marine biologist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and co-author of a paper announcing the discovery Thursday in the journal Science.

Olivier Gros, a coauthor and biologist at the University of the French West Indies and Guiana, found the first example of this bacterium — named Thiomargar­ita magnifica, or "magnificen­t sulfur pearl" — clinging to sunken mangrove leaves in the archipelag­o of Guadeloupe in 2009.

But he didn't immediatel­y know it was a bacterium because of its surprising­ly large size, just over a third of an inch (0.9 centimeter­s) long. Only later genetic analysis revealed the organism to be a single bacterial cell.

"It's an amazing discovery," said Petra Levin, a microbiolo­gist at Washington University

in St Louis, who was not involved in the study. "It opens up the question of how many of these giant bacteria are out there — and reminds us we should never, ever underestim­ate bacteria."

Gros also found the bacterium attached to oyster shells, rocks and glass bottles in the swamp.

Scientists have not yet been able to grow it in lab culture, but the researcher­s' say the cell has a structure that's unusual for bacteria. One key difference: It has a large central compartmen­t, or vacuole, that allows some cell functions to happen in that controlled environmen­t instead of throughout the cell.

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