nanobacteria
Nanobacteria is a term used to describe nanoscale particles claimed to be ultra-small bacteria-like organisms, typically reported in the tens to a couple hundred nanometers in diameter. The concept emerged in the late 1990s from the work of Kajander and colleagues, who reported finding such particles in human blood, urine, kidney stones, dental plaque, and other sources. They proposed that nanobacteria could replicate through a biomineralization process and speculated a role in calcific diseases such as kidney stones and vascular calcification.
Proponents attributed various biological-like properties to these particles, including self-replication and metabolism, and suggested links to
The scientific response was highly controversial and largely critical. Independent researchers were unable to reproduce living
Today the term nanobacteria is generally viewed with skepticism in mainstream microbiology, and it has largely