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How microbes help detoxify the atmosphere: Study provides atomic-level insights

Study reveals how microbes help detoxify our atmosphere
An image showing the molecular architecture of the specialized enzyme that allows microbes to consume toxic CO from the atmosphere. Credit: Ashleigh Kropp and Dr. David Gillett

Melbourne researchers have discovered crucial new information about how microbes consume huge amounts of carbon monoxide (CO) and help reduce levels of this deadly gas.

monoxide are released into the atmosphere globally each year. Microbes consume about 250 million tons of this, reducing CO to safer levels.

The Monash University-led study, published in , reveals at an how consume CO present in the atmosphere. They use a special enzyme, called the CO dehydrogenase, to extract energy from this universally present but highly toxic gas.

Co-first author Ashleigh Kropp, from the Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute's (BDI) Greening lab and the University of Melbourne's Grinter lab, said the study showed for the first time how this enzyme extracted atmospheric CO and powered cells.

"This enzyme is used by trillions of microbes in our soils and waters. These microbes consume CO for their own survival, but in the process inadvertently help us," Ms. Kropp said.

Co-first author Dr. David Gillett, who completed his Ph.D. research in the Greening Lab, said this was a fantastic example of microbial 'ingenuity': how life has evolved ways to turn something toxic into something useful.

"These microbes help clean our atmosphere," Dr. Gillett said. "This counteracts , which kills many millions of people each year, and also reduces global warming given CO is indirectly a greenhouse gas."

While this discovery is unlikely to be directly used to combat or monitor CO emissions, it deepens our understanding of how the is regulated and how it might respond to future changes.

Professor Chris Greening, co-senior author and head of BDI's Global Change Program, said the discovery highlighted the broader importance of microbes.

"Microbes play countless roles essential for both human and planetary health. Yet, because they're invisible and often misunderstood, their contributions frequently go unnoticed," he said.

Ms. Kropp said microbes were a big reason why our air was breathable. "They make half the oxygen we breathe and detoxify various pollutants like CO. It's crucial we better understand and appreciate how they support our own survival," she said.

More information: Kropp, A., et al. Quinone extraction drives atmospheric carbon monoxide oxidation in bacteria, Nature Chemical Biology (2025).

Journal information: Nature Chemical Biology

Provided by Monash University

Citation: How microbes help detoxify the atmosphere: Study provides atomic-level insights (2025, January 29) retrieved 26 August 2025 from /news/2025-01-microbes-detoxify-atmosphere-atomic-insights.html
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