New bacterial pump could be used to remove cesium from the environment by light
A novel cesium-transporting bacterial pump developed by researchers at the NITech could be beneficial in radioactivity decontamination efforts. These findings were recently reported in The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters.
The NITech-led team, in collaboration with colleagues at The University of Tokyo, successfully induced a molecular pump found in bacteria to transport cesium. The process simply requires the presence of light to make it function. The finding could pave the way for a new means of extracting cesium from the environment, potentially speeding up decontamination efforts following the radioactive fallout from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011.
This work focused on rhodopsins, which are light-activated molecules found in the human eye as well as in bacteria. Rhodopsins have been found capable of pumping anions or cations into or out of cells, respectivelyactivity important for maintaining various cell functions.
In this study, the team worked on a rhodopsin from a marine bacterium, which normally pumps sodium, as well as lithium, across the cell membrane. Earlier studies had identified the particular building blocks within the middle of this pump that are vital for it to transport only those ions it is meant to transport. Subsequent works applied this information to induce the pumping of potassium instead of sodium. Further progress along this line of study has now led to production of a cesium pump. This is a major breakthroughno light-driven cesium pumps have been found in nature.
Read more at: http://phys.org/news/2016-02-bacterial-cesium-environment.html#jCp