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Scientists trap bacteria with optical tractor beam
by Brooks Hays
Bielefeld, Germany (UPI) Dec 13, 2016


New Zealand glowworms use sticky beaded strands of urine to trap prey
Christchurch, New Zealand (UPI) Dec 14, 2016 - Walk through a cave in New Zealand and there's a chance you might find yourself face to face with sticky strands of urea beads. As new research revealed, a unique species of cave glowworms on the island nation uses adhesive "fishing lines" to catch dinner.

Insects are drawn to the light of the New Zealand glowworms, Arachnocampa luminosa, and become trapped in the sticky threads. Unlike spider web threads, the glowworm's beaded threads are absorbent and moist. In addition to catching prey, the absorbent threads may help the glowworms collect water and avoid dehydration.

Researchers used scanning electron microscopy and X-ray spectroscopy to analyze the molecular composition of the fishing lines. The imaging revealed mineralized crystals within the beady droplets, including urea crystals -- a main ingredient in urine.

Scientists suspect the thread is created in the midgut, where components of the worm's primary urine is incorporated before it is expelled through the worm's mouth.

Researchers described their analysis of the unique adhesive threads in the journal PLOS ONE.

"Characterization of the adhesive threads of the world-renowned glowworm from New Zealand display a complete different prey capture system to those found in spiders or other glue-producing animals," lead study authro Janek von Byern, a researcher at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Experimental and Clinical Traumatology, said in a news release. "These bioadhesives display a unique composition contain mainly water, hygroscopic salts, and to a very low extent also biomolecules as proteins and lipids."

Studying bacterial cells and other cell cultures at high resolutions is now much easier thanks to a team of researchers from Germany.

Scientists at Bielefeld University have found a way to trap bacteria with a laser beam, simplifying the process of imaging cells with powerful microscopes.

Typically, scientists affix cells to a substrate before placing them under the lens of a microscope. The process risks augmenting the cells and tainting the sample -- whether blood or bacteria.

"Our new method enables us to take cells that cannot be anchored on surfaces and then use an optical trap to study them at a very high resolution," Thomas Huser, a professor of physics at Bielefeld, said in a news release. "The cells are held in place by a kind of optical tractor beam."

The new process for microscope imaging uses a beam of infrared laser light. The laser excites internal forces in the cell that keep it trapped within the beam. A second laser can be used to move and turn the trapped sample.

"The principle underlying this laser beam is similar to the concept to be found in the television series 'Star Trek,'" said Huser.

Scientists incorporated the the technique into the superresolution fluorescence microscopy imaging process, allows them to secure high-resolution images of cell samples from a variety of angles.

Researchers described the process in the journal Nature Communications.


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