Insect Wing Kills Bacteria

The nanoscale structure of a clanger cicada’s wings destroys threatening microbes on contact.

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A redeye cicada (Psaltoda moerens )WIKIMEDIA, FIR0002/FLAGSTAFFOTOSIt’s one of the first natural surfaces found to kill bacteria simply by virtue of its physical structure, Nature reported: an array of hexagonal “nanopillars” on the wings of a clanger cicada (Psaltoda claripennis) can put enough strain on bacterial cells to rupture them. The findings, published last month (February 19) in Biophysical Journal, detail how this nanoscale structure can be so deadly.

Elena Ivanova of Australia's Swinburne University of Technology and colleagues found that the nanopillars do not puncture the bacteria. The structures look more like blunted spikes when viewed on the scale of bacteria, which stick to the tips of the nanopillars, then stretch into the hexagonal spaces between them, putting extreme strain on the cell.

“[It’s like] the stretching of an elastic sheet of some kind, such as a latex glove,” Ivanova told Nature. “If you take hold of a piece of latex in both hands and slowly stretch it, it will become thinner at the center, [and] will begin to tear.”

The nanoscale defense only appears to work on bacteria with relatively soft membranes, however; those with greater membrane rigidity could survive the stretch ...

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Meet the Author

  • Jef Akst

    Jef Akst was managing editor of The Scientist, where she started as an intern in 2009 after receiving a master’s degree from Indiana University in April 2009 studying the mating behavior of seahorses.
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