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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on November 19, 2004.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.104.047068
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Biophysical Journal 88:1496-1499 (2005)
© 2005 The Biophysical Society

Observation of Magnetoreceptive Behavior in a Multicellular Magnetotactic Prokaryote in Higher than Geomagnetic Fields

Michael Greenberg, Karl Canter, Inga Mahler and Adam Tornheim

Department of Physics, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts 02454

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Karl Canter, Fax: 781-736-2915; E-mail: canter{at}brandeis.edu.

The magnetotactic multicellular prokaryote (MMP), a motile aggregate of bacterial cells, is known to exhibit an unusual "ping-pong" motility in magnetic fields greater than the earth's field. This motility is characterized by rapid excursions, opposite the direction of an applied magnetic field, and slower returns along the direction of the magnetic field. We have carried out detailed observations of the time and spatial dependence of the ping-pong motility and find 1), the outward and return excursions exhibit a uniform deceleration and acceleration, respectively; 2), the probability per unit time of an MMP undergoing a ping-pong excursion increases monotonically with the field strength; and 3), the outward excursions exhibit a very unusual distance distribution which is dependent on the magnetic field strength. At any given field strength, a characteristic distance is observed, below which very few excursions occur. Beyond this distance, there is a rapid increase in the number of excursions with an exponentially decaying distribution. These observations cannot be explained by conventional magnetotaxis, i.e., a physical directing torque on the organism, and suggest a magnetoreceptive capability of the MMP.




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