Seven Flagellar Motors In One

SEVEN FLAGELLAR MOTORS IN ONE

(Friday Church News Notes, September 11, 2015, www.wayoflife.org fbns@wayoflife.org, 866-295-4143) – The following is from CreationMoments.com, May 18, 2015:

“Try as they might, evolutionists are powerless to account for the microscopic rotary motor that propels bacteria through fluid just like a powerboat skims along the surface of a lake. But if the bacterium’s flagellar motor troubles evolutionists, they must really be puzzled by the fast-moving MO-1 bacterium. After all, its hair-like flagellum isn’t powered by just one motor. It uses seven motors all hooked up in parallel! If the MO-1 bacterium were the size of a small speedboat, its proportional speed would be ten times the speed of sound. You’ll need a microscope to actually see one. The bacterium measures only about 225 nanometres wide, so you’d need forty-four of them side by side to amount to the width of a single grain of talcum powder. According to a team of researchers working in France and Japan, the flagellar apparatus of marine bacterium MO-1 is a tight bundle of seven flagellar filaments enveloped in a sheath. The motors are arranged in an intertwined hexagonal array similar to the thick and thin filaments of vertebrate skeletal muscles. There are also twenty-four fibrils in the sheath that are thought to counter-rotate between the flagella to minimize the friction of high-speed rotation. From the Scriptures we see that God moves quickly when we call upon Him in prayer. God is never far from us, of course. But He is never nearer than when we draw near to Him in prayer.”

This entry was posted in Articles, Creation, Various. Bookmark the permalink.