Nanobacteria in Clouds May Spread Diseases Around the World

Environment News Service, April, 2005 by staff

CARDIFF, UK (ENS) — --> The scientist who discovered that dust in interstellar space and in comets is largely organic, now says that nanobacteria in clouds are responsible for spreading illnesses such as kidney stones, heart disease, and HIV around the world.

Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe of Cardiff University says in a recent article in the Journal of Proteome Research that these ulta-tiny organisms are wide-spread on land and in the atmosphere, and that they play a crucial role in the spread of disease.

Nanobacteria are the smallest known self-replicating bacteria, about 100-fold smaller than regular bacteria. At 30-100 nanometers in size, they are far smaller than any other known bacteria, and are even smaller than many viruses. A nanometer is one billionth of...

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