Classic Rock
New microbe species are named after RUSH
Via Ultimate Classic Rock
By Michael Gallucci
New microbe species were named after RUSH in University of British Columbia. According to them the trio of microbes was found in the guts of termites and sport long hair and have a tendency to move rhythmically under a microscope.
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The researchers called the new Pseudotrichonympha species P. leei, P. lifesoni, and P. pearti after Rush’s Geddy Lee, Alex Lifeson and Neil Peart.
The University of British Columbia microbiologist and senior author of a paper about the new species, Patrick Keeling, said he was asked by a Spanish colleague to recommend “some good Canadian music, and he suggested he listen to Rush”. “He came back to me and said, ‘Those microbes we’re finding have long hair like the guys on the album 2112!’”
The recently discovered microbes are covered with flagella, the long threads cells use to move. The university’s report notes that many cells have a few flagella, but this new species boasts more than 10,000 “very long flagella, giving them flowing hair.”
As the study in Scientific Reports points out, the three members of Rush aren’t exactly the type to bust moves onstage, but their new microbe counterparts “sway their bodies in microscopic dances.” The one named after Peart, particularly, features a “rotating intracellular structure never seen before.” “We have looked at a lot of crazy cells in my lab, and none of us has ever seen anything like this,” Keeling said.
You can watch a video on the new species below:
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