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March 5, 2010

Naegleria genome project on Bay Area PBS (KQED)

Step aside, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Here’s a story about an organism that dramatically transforms itself when it’s under stress. It turns from a lethargic amoeba into a sprightly, two-armed swimmer.
This unlikely single-celled creature is named Naegleria gruberi. It lives in the dirt, under the eucalyptus trees, on the University of California, Berkeley campus.
“A lot of people call Naegleria a soil organism, but if you look in dry, sandy soil, you won’t find it,” says Lillian Fritz-Laylin, a graduate student at Berkeley. “It hates to get dried out. So you’ll find it in the mud, or in the pond, or in the bottom of puddles in the woods.”

Read more on KQED‘s website.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: evolution, Simon Prochnik, UC Berkeley

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