Mars is a hostile planet. Its distance from the sun makes it
cold and barren – average daily temperatures on Mars are around -60C and this
falls to - 126C in winter near the poles.
What’s more the thin Martian atmosphere means the planet is
bombarded with intense life-destroying radiation.
Scientists believe a handful of single celled creatures could
have what it takes to survive on the Red Planet
And there’s little oxygen there. In fact 95% of the
atmosphere is made up of carbon dioxide.
Yet scientists believe that a handful of simple single
celled creatures found in some of the most extreme places on Earth – sulphurous
lakes and permafrost for instance – could have what it takes to survive on the
Red Planet.
To vet the prospective applicants, astrobiologists are
replicating Martian conditions in the laboratory, zapping the microbes with
gamma and UV radiation, and freezing them to see if they survive. Some microbes have even been
taken up to the International Space Station for the ultimate test of
how they cope off our planet.
As a result the researchers now have a list of potential
candidates that could survive the Red Planet’s sub zero temperatures, vacuum
conditions and intense solar radiation. So what are the candidates like?
The most obvious potential Martian is nicknamed “Conan the
Bacterium” for its toughness
The most obvious potential Martian is Deinococcus radiodurans,
a bacterium that is the most radiation resistant lifeform that has ever been
found. The species is nicknamed “Conan the Bacterium” for its toughness. The almost
indestructible microbe can survive doses of ionising radiation thousands of
times stronger than those that would kill a human.
The bacterium isn’t phased by extreme temperature either.
Scientists chilled D.
radiodurans to -79C, the average temperature at Mars’s mid-latitudes.
Then they bombarded the cells with gamma rays to simulate the dose they would
receive living under 30cm of Martian soil over long periods of time. The beings
were so hardy that researchers estimated it would take 1.2 million years under
these conditions to shrink a population of the bacteria to a millionth of its
original size.
Another contender well suited to life on Mars is the
Halobacteriaceae family. These microbes are examples of ancient bacteria-like
microbes called archaea, which are probably the oldest forms of life on the
planet. They might have first evolved on the primordial Earth as long ago as
3.5 to 3.8 billion years ago.
Halobacteriaceae could theoretically survive in salty brines
on Mars
Halobacteriaceae live in salty places on Earth, such as the
Dead Sea. They could theoretically survive on Mars too following the discovery
of salty brines, or reservoirs of liquid salt on Mars. Two
members of the family –Halococcus dombrowskii andHalobacterium sp.
NRC-1 – have already proved that they can survive a simulated Martian
atmosphere. An experiment
showed that they could happily cope with pressures six times greater
than Earth’s standard atmospheric pressure, an atmosphere of 98% carbon
dioxide, and an average temperature of -60C for up to 6 hours.
Now Stefan Leuko, an
astrobiologist at the German Aerospace Centre has put three other salt-tolerant
"halophilic" archaea through their paces to see whether they
could survive when exposed to UV solar radiation as powerful as that found in
outer space. He found that two of the organisms, Halobacterium salinarum NRC-1
and Halococcus morrhuaewere much more resistant to radiation than the
third species,Halococcus hamelinensis, despite the fact that the three species
are all from the same family.
There’s another reason to believe that salt-tolerant
microbes could live on Mars. There’s controversial evidence that here on Earth, some have survived for million of
years inside salt – or “halite” – crystals.
“We have organisms that can stay viable for millions of
years enclosed in halite and are highly radiation resistant,” says Leuko. Given
that we now know saline brines exist on Mars, halophilic microbes seem like a
very good model for the kind of cells that could survive on the Red Planet.
“When it comes to radiation resistance, the clear winner is still Deinococcusradiodurans,
but, this strain cannot survive in high saline environments,” says Leuko.
“Therefore I think that halophilic archaea are good candidates when it comes to
look for life (extinct or extant) on another planet.”
Methanogens are perfect candidates for life on Mars, as they
don't need light, oxygen, or organic nutrients to survive
Another type of archaea may also have what it takes to
survive on Mars: the methanogens. Instead of breathing oxygen, they use
hydrogen and carbon dioxide as their energy source, and generate methane as a
byproduct, hence the name.
Methanogens are widespread in nature and often make their
homes in extreme environments. They have been found in hot springs, salty
ponds, acidic and alkaline lakes and in the sub-freezing soils of Siberian
permafrost. They have also been found living in the guts of cattle, termites
and in dead and decaying matter.
It’s the permafrost dwelling microbes that are of most
interest to astrobiologists, as the permanently frozen soils of Arctic tundra
closely mimic conditions that exist just below the Martian surface. In fact a
study recently showed that a giant
piece of ice as big as California and Texas combined lurks beneath the surface
of Mars between its equator and north pole.
Methanogens are perfect candidates for life on Mars, as the
simple organisms don't need light, oxygen, or organic nutrients to survive –
none of which are plentiful on our neighbouring planet. In an experiment in
2007, species of
methanogenic archaea were exposed to simulated conditions of Mars – and they
survived.
Why have any of these microbes evolved to be so tough?
Now a team led by Dirk
Wagnerfrom the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences in Potsdam has found another indestructible
methanogen, calledMethanosarcina soligelidi, living in the permafrost soils
of Samoylov Island in Siberia. He calls the microbe “our superhero” because of
the conditions it can withstand. The average daily temperature on Samoylov is
-14.7C, although it can drop as low as -48C. The island is also very dry, with just
190mm rain falling a year, and the soils remain permanently frozen.
Wagner has already discovered microbes and other methanogens
living in the frozen soils that can survive intense cold and dehydration, but
his superhero is almost indestructible.
He bombarded
the microbe with solar ultraviolet and ionising gamma radiation to
test its survival limit. It could withstand up to 13.8 times more UV radiation,
and 46.6 times more ionising radiation than another species of methanogen,Methanosarcina
barkeri. This means the microbe can absorb a level of radiation similar to
that which would have been prevalent on early Earth and on present day Mars.
A question still remains though. Why are these microbes so
tough? Why evolve to survive levels of radiation that are common in space and
on Mars but that are not generally found on Earth?
Archaea evolved when the Earth lacked an ozone layer and was
exposed to the full UV spectrum from the sun
The dose of background ionising radiation in permafrost, for
example, is about 2 milligrays per year, about the same as the radiation from a
single brain CT scan and very far below the radiation threshold displayed by some
microbes living in the environment.
One reason for the discrepancy lies in the age of the
microbes. Many of the most radiation-resistant species are archaea, one of the
earliest and most primitive group of organisms. Archaea evolved when the Earth
lacked an ozone layer and was exposed to the full UV spectrum from the sun.
Solar radiation would have been much greater than it is today, and so early
colonisers of Earth would have needed coping mechanisms, which they perhaps
never lost even once our planet gained an ozone layer. However most researchers
now think that life began deep in the oceans, where radiation would have been
less of a problem even before there was an ozone layer.
Another theory is that the microorganisms have developed
their resistance to radiation purely by accident, as a consequence of adapting
to their extreme environments on Earth.
Another theory is that the microorganisms have developed
their resistance to radiation purely by accident
“In general organisms that are resistant to one stress are
also resistant to others,” explains Wagner. “The bacteria Deinococcusradiodurans is
highly radiation resistant, but it’s also resistant to drying out. The two are
most likely based on the same mechanisms.”
In other words all the Martian candidates – Conan the
bacterium, the Halobacteriaceae and the methanogens – have developed unique
ways of surviving in their environments. Radiation resistance is just a
by-product.
How exactly do the microbes protect themselves from
radiation?
Some of Leuko’s salt tolerant microorganisms do so by simply
hiding away from the sun’s UV radiation. The Halococcus morrhuae cells
cluster together forming layers upon layers of microbes. The cells deep within
the cluster are protected from solar radiation, which is absorbed by the cells
closer to the surface. As the microbes naturally live in low oxygen, salty
habitats, they don’t suffocate.
However, as Leuko explains, this strategy only works for UV
radiation and not ionising gamma radiation, which has more energy radiation and
will penetrate through the cluster to reach cells deep in the centre. This
means that the microbes could escape UV radiation on Mars by hiding within
soils or ice, but they would still be prone to ionising radiation.
Other microbes use a different approach. Radiation triggers
the release of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which damage cell constituents
such as proteins and DNA. To counteract the problem, salt-tolerant archaea have
a purple pigment called bacteriorhodopsin that can mop up ROSs and protect the
cell from damage. They may have evolved the pigment because ROSs are also
generated when the cell dries out – which is a common problem for cells living
in such salty environments.
Even if radiation and drying does damage DNA, many of the
microbes seem to be able to repair this damage. A study found that Conan the
bacterium was
able to stitch broken DNA back together with repair proteins. As long as
the repair systems are intact, the bacteria can survive.
If radiation and drying damages DNA, many of the microbes
seem to be able to repair it
The Conan microbe has another trick too. It carries multiple
copies of its genes on different chromosomes. If one or two copies are damaged
by radiation, the cell can use another copy of the gene to stay alive while it
repairs the DNA damage. Leuko found that one of his archaea, Halobacteriumsalinarum NRC-1,
was also able to actively repair its cells during the exposure to radiation,
and Wagner believes that DNA repair may also be at the heart of the success of
his superhero Methanosarcina soligelidi.
Some microbes accumulate salt and sugar inside their cells
to protect themselves from drying out. This also seems to offer protection from
radiation by somehow preventing the DNA double helix from breaking apart. How
salts and sugars help is unknown, but the evidence is mounting that one sugar
in particular, trehalose, does
indeed offer protection and stops proteins and cell membranes from unravelling when
they get hot and dry out.
Promising though all of this sounds, neither Leuko nor
Wagner truly believe that any of these microbes could really survive on the
surface of Mars today. Conditions there are just too extreme for even the
toughest Earth-based life.
However the conditions on Mars’ surface early in its history
were similar to those on early Earth. The planet may be barren and dry now, but
lots of evidence suggests that rivers, lakes and seas once flowed on Mars.
Perhaps life could have evolved on Mars back then and subsequently adapted as
conditions worsened.
Mars may be barren and dry now, but lots of evidence
suggests that rivers, lakes and seas once flowed there
“If we have a look at the environmental conditions on early
Mars and early Earth they are comparable,” says Wagner. “Both had moderate
temperature and pressure conditions, there was no oxygen on both planets and
whilst Earth was dominated by oceans there are strong indications that there
was also liquid water on Mars’ surface.”
We know that life developed in those conditions on Earth,
and it probably could have done so on early Mars too. What happened to those
lifeforms when Mars became a harsher place to live is unknown. “It could have
become extinct, but could also be buried deep within the Martian crust,” says
Wagner.
Culled from bbc.co.uk



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