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Q: Why do we get a sweet smell when it rains?

Krishna: Geosmin! Heard about it?

Image source: Google images

Geosmin is an organic compound with a distinct earthy flavour and aroma produced by certain bacteria, and is responsible for the earthy taste of beetroots and a contributor to the strong scent (petrichor) that occurs in the air when rain falls after a dry spell of weather or when soil is disturbed.

Geosmin is the soil-based compound that gives the evocative, earthy smell so characteristic of spring. It's best appreciated after recent rainfall or while digging. The human nose is so sensitive to the compound that it is detectable at one hundred parts per trillion (ppt).

According to new research (1), it is because of an ancestral mutual relationship between the soil bacteria Streptomyces and primitive, six-legged creatures called springtails (Collembola).

Streptomyces are globally significant bacteria that produce a range of organic compounds, including  to fight off enemies in the soil. These have been exploited forhuman use as some world's most effective antibiotics.

They also produce geosmin and a range of other volatile organic compounds (VOCs). While Streptomyces species vary drastically in the types of molecules they produce as antibiotics, they all, without exception, produce geosmin. Scientists suspected that this might attract something, otherwise this will not be produced without any purpose. So they tried to find out what it is. 

To find out what might be attracted to the smell of geosmin, researchers  laid out a network of traps baited with Streptomyces. Others were baited with control substances.

The experiments revealed that springtails were attracted to the Streptomyces bait. 

 Scientists used a method called electroantennography—which involves inserting tiny electrodes into the antennae of the 1.5 mm-long springtails—and observing their responses to a succession of molecules.

All these experiments added up to one clear observation: the springtails were powerfully drawn to geosmin and to another earthy smelling compound produced by Streptomyces called 2-methylisoborneol (2-MIB).

The study finds that geosmin and 2-MIB are chemical signals that guide springtails to Streptomyces as a privileged food source—one that kills other organisms such as nematodes and fruit flies—but which springtails can withstand because they have a battery of enzymes which detoxify the antibiotics produced by Streptomyces.

In return, springtails help disperse Streptomyces spores in two ways: by defecation and by distribution of spores that stick to their bodies. The study found that the spores survived passage through the springtail gut to give rise to new colonies of Streptomyces.

There is mutual benefit. The springtails eat the Streptomyces, so the geosmin is attracting them to a valuable food source. And, the springtails distribute the spores, both stuck on their bodies and in their faeces, which are full of viable spores, so the Streptomyces get dispersed.

These insights provide an explanation for the previously reported correlation between geosmin production and sporulation in Streptomyces.

So the sweet smell of the first rain drops is the result of  of chemical communication that started and  lasted for 450 million years.

CITATIONS:

1. Paul G. Becher et al. Developmentally regulated volatiles geosmin and 2-methylisoborneol attract a soil arthropod to Streptomyces bacteria promoting spore dispersal, Nature Microbiology (2020). DOI: 10.1038/s41564-020-0697-x

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Q: Why do we get bad smells? How can we stop them?
Krishna: First let us understand how we smell. Molecules in the air binds to receptors in our nose and the odour is the signal that is sent to our brain.
Odours are made up of lots of different compounds which can produce slightly different signals. Typically, a compound that elicits a response is called an odourant.

The really intriguing things that relates to odour perception is the great variation in how different people detect and perceive odours; for example, a sommelier or perfumer would be very good at isolating different characters in odours, while other people might be highly sensitive to odours or not at all.

Some people might lack receptors for certain types of odourants: that's called having an anosmia.

The key to minimising odour was knowing what stage of the transmission process you are targeting, because different methods can be applied during the odour's development.

Different interventions, for example, air freshener products, target different aspects of the process.

The first stage is formation: how the odourant is being produced. The easiest way to stop an odour is to prevent it from being formed. Usually microbes are involved in most bad smell situations,  for example, volatile fatty acids that smell like feet are formed from the microbial degradation of carbohydrates. Controlling or stopping bad odour causing mould formation in your homes with adequate ventilation, controlling moisture, and drying clothes very fast. Don't take smelly things inside homes or cook smelly foods inside. 

The second step was controlling how the odourant was emitted, like removing garabge, controlling the moisture in the substance. We can also remove odours using processes such as activated carbon filters, specialized scrubbers or other filtration methods. Have adequate ventilation systems at home. Close toilet lid as soon as you use it.

The third method in minimizing odour is dilution or transmission. Having buffer zones between polluting industries and human dwellings is important.

Don't use synthetic clothes at home because odourant absorbs into those fibres .

The fourth and last stage of minimizing odour was controlling how people perceived it. 

How do you stop your nose from detecting it—how do you trick your sense of smell or mask the odour?

Use masking agents like scents. However,  these masking agents don't always work; sometimes, they result in strange, more unpleasant combinations of odours, or the masking agent itself can annoy people if it very strong. 

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