Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Gas vesicles

View through CrossRef
The gas vesicle is a hollow structure made of protein. It usually has the form of a cylindrical tube closed by conical end caps. Gas vesicles occur in five phyla of the Bacteria and two groups of the Archaea, but they are mostly restricted to planktonic microorganisms, in which they provide buoyancy. By regulating their relative gas vesicle content aquatic microbes are able to perform vertical migrations. In slowly growing organisms such movements are made more efficiently than by swimming with flagella. The gas vesicle is impermeable to liquid water, but it is highly permeable to gases and is normally filled with air. It is a rigid structure of low compressibility, but it collapses flat under a certain critical pressure and buoyancy is then lost. Gas vesicles in different organisms vary in width, from 45 to > 200 nm; in accordance with engineering principles the narrower ones are stronger (have higher critical pressures) than wide ones, but they contain less gas space per wall volume and are therefore less efficient at providing buoyancy. A survey of gas-vacuolate cyanobacteria reveals that there has been natural selection for gas vesicles of the maximum width permitted by the pressure encountered in the natural environment, which is mainly determined by cell turgor pressure and water depth. Gas vesicle width is genetically determined, perhaps through the amino acid sequence of one of the constituent proteins. Up to 14 genes have been implicated in gas vesicle production, but so far the products of only two have been shown to be present in the gas vesicle: GvpA makes the ribs that form the structure, and GvpC binds to the outside of the ribs and stiffens the structure against collapse. The evolution of the gas vesicle is discussed in relation to the homologies of these proteins.
American Society for Microbiology
Title: Gas vesicles
Description:
The gas vesicle is a hollow structure made of protein.
It usually has the form of a cylindrical tube closed by conical end caps.
Gas vesicles occur in five phyla of the Bacteria and two groups of the Archaea, but they are mostly restricted to planktonic microorganisms, in which they provide buoyancy.
By regulating their relative gas vesicle content aquatic microbes are able to perform vertical migrations.
In slowly growing organisms such movements are made more efficiently than by swimming with flagella.
The gas vesicle is impermeable to liquid water, but it is highly permeable to gases and is normally filled with air.
It is a rigid structure of low compressibility, but it collapses flat under a certain critical pressure and buoyancy is then lost.
Gas vesicles in different organisms vary in width, from 45 to > 200 nm; in accordance with engineering principles the narrower ones are stronger (have higher critical pressures) than wide ones, but they contain less gas space per wall volume and are therefore less efficient at providing buoyancy.
A survey of gas-vacuolate cyanobacteria reveals that there has been natural selection for gas vesicles of the maximum width permitted by the pressure encountered in the natural environment, which is mainly determined by cell turgor pressure and water depth.
Gas vesicle width is genetically determined, perhaps through the amino acid sequence of one of the constituent proteins.
Up to 14 genes have been implicated in gas vesicle production, but so far the products of only two have been shown to be present in the gas vesicle: GvpA makes the ribs that form the structure, and GvpC binds to the outside of the ribs and stiffens the structure against collapse.
The evolution of the gas vesicle is discussed in relation to the homologies of these proteins.

Related Results

Manager Of Supply Planning And Projects
Manager Of Supply Planning And Projects
Abstract The Southern California Gas Company is responsible for providing gas service to 12 million southern Californians. SoCal Gas, like other major gas distrib...
Gas Utilization – The KOC Approach
Gas Utilization – The KOC Approach
Abstract Kuwait Oil Company (KOC), an upstream subsidiary of Kuwait Petroleum Corporation (KPC), ranks amongst the major oil companies of the world. However, due to ...
Comparisons of Pore Structure for Unconventional Tight Gas, Coalbed Methane and Shale Gas Reservoirs
Comparisons of Pore Structure for Unconventional Tight Gas, Coalbed Methane and Shale Gas Reservoirs
Extended abstract Tight sands gas, coalbed methane and shale gas are three kinds of typical unconventional natural gas. With the decrease of conventional oil and gas...
Improved Gas-In-Place Determination for Coal Gas Reservoirs
Improved Gas-In-Place Determination for Coal Gas Reservoirs
Abstract The Upper Cretaceous Fruitland Formation of the San Juan Basin of Colorado and New Mexico has been a very active natural gas play in recent years. Case...
Total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to study sheet front growth in phospholipid supported lipid membrane formation
Total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy to study sheet front growth in phospholipid supported lipid membrane formation
Supported lipid bilayer (SLB) based biosensors possess biomedical applications such as in rapid detection of antigens and cytochromes. It is generally believed that the SLB can be ...
Critical Gas Saturation During Depressurisation and its Importance in the Brent Field
Critical Gas Saturation During Depressurisation and its Importance in the Brent Field
Critical Gas Saturation During Depressurisation and its Importance in the Brent Field. Abstract After some 20 years of pressure ...
Gas Water Deliverability Considerations
Gas Water Deliverability Considerations
Abstract When natural gas from high pressure and temperature reservoir is produced, due to cooling of gas in wellbore tubing and in gas gathering pipelines, the a...
Unconventional Reservoirs: Basic Petrophysical Concepts for Shale Gas
Unconventional Reservoirs: Basic Petrophysical Concepts for Shale Gas
Abstract Unconventional reservoirs have burst with considerable force in oil and gas production worldwide. Shale Gas is one of them, with intense activity taking pla...

Back to Top