Nanobacteria
in clouds could spread disease, scientists claim
07 Apr 2005
Micro-organisms in
clouds could play a crucial role in the spread of disease and in the formation
of raindrops, scientists
have claimed.
The radical theories
about nanobacteria - micro-organisms considerably smaller than ordinary
bacteria - in clouds are published in two recent articles in the Journal of
Proteome Research by Dr Andrei P. Sommer of the University of Ulm, Germany, and Professor Chandra
Wickramasinghe of Cardiff University, UK.
They say nanobacteria
are now accepted as being widely prevalent in the terrestrial environment and
that their evidence is
compelling for the existence of these nano-organisms, even in the
stratosphere. In humans, nanobacteria have now been identified on four continents, they add.
Dr Sommer and Professor
Wickramasinghe further suggest that nanobacteria's involvement in several
serious diseases such as the
formation kidney stones, heart disease, and HIV is also slowly being recognized
by the scientific community.
"Experiments have
shown that nanobacteria are excreted from the body in urine and their dispersal
from the ground into the
atmosphere and stratosphere appears to be inevitable," said Dr
Sommer.
The scientists argue
that their occurrence in clouds could play a crucial role in the global
dispersal of infective agents, and might also play a prominent role in the
nucleation of cloud drops.
"This happens
because nanobacteria, lifted from the ground by winds, could transit between
the high humidity region of the
clouds and the relatively dry inter-cloud regions, leading to
oscillations between a dormant state and one of activation," explained Professor
Wickramasinghe. "Remnants of a sticky protein (slime) coating nanobacteria
makes them act as extremely efficient cloud condensation nuclei, with a
tendency to aggregate to clusters upon contact."
Their work corroborates
the findings of Ruprecht Jaenicke, of the Institute for Atmospheric Physics at
Mainz University, Germany,
on bioaerosols (airborne contaminants) and proteins in the atmosphere reported
in New Scientist (31 March) and
Science (1 April). The contribution of nanobacteria to pathogenic
bioaerosols, in the view of the authors, must overwhelm all other types of biological
particles in the atmosphere.