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Cable bacteria accelerate the anaerobic removal of pyrene in black odorous river sediments
Journal of Hazardous Materials, 2023Youda Huang, Wenzhe Hu, Meijun Dong
exaly
The charge transport mechanism in cable bacteria
In this dissertation, the charge transport mechanism in the conductive fibres of cable bacteria is investigated. In Chapter 1, the research field of bacterial electricity is introduced. Three kinds of bacterial nanowires are discussed: Shewenella nanowires, Geobacter nanowires and the conductive fibres fromcable bacteria. Even though the three types ofopenaire +2 more sources
Management of electric currents in cable bacteria
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Bioenergetics, 2022openaire +1 more source
2018
“Cable bacteria” were discovered in 2012 by researchers at AarhusUniversity and revealed a novel type of long-distance electron transportwithin their filamentous bodies. While our preliminary data have indicatedthat cable bacteria have the highest respiration rate per cell evermeasured, extensive omics data have failed to identify any terminaloxidase ...
Drace, Taner, Bavishi, Krutika
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“Cable bacteria” were discovered in 2012 by researchers at AarhusUniversity and revealed a novel type of long-distance electron transportwithin their filamentous bodies. While our preliminary data have indicatedthat cable bacteria have the highest respiration rate per cell evermeasured, extensive omics data have failed to identify any terminaloxidase ...
Drace, Taner, Bavishi, Krutika
openaire +1 more source
Shining light on the electrical network of cable bacteria
Long before humans, microbes harnessed the power of electricity by evolving specialized cell structures and electrogenic metabolisms. In the last two decades, several types of electroactive bacteria have been discovered, and so-called “cable bacteria” present a recent and remarkable addition to this list. These long, filamentous bacteria are members ofopenaire +2 more sources
Bacteria make cables to form a ‘living gel’
Physics WorldResearchers have found that bacterial cells in solutions of polymers such as mucus grow into long cable-like structures that buckle and twist on each other forming a “living gel” made of intertwined cells.
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