AI Article Synopsis

  • Two strains of cyanobacteria from extreme environments were tested to see how well they could survive freezing temperatures in salty-ice conditions.
  • Both strains thrived at a temperature of 258 K in NaCl solutions, likely escaping harsh conditions by moving through liquid veins, and surprisingly, they also survived in other salty-ice environments below the eutectic temperature.
  • The study suggests that these cyanobacteria might use a strategy of vitrification, entering a dried state to survive in harsh icy worlds, such as those on moons like Europa, until conditions become favorable for them to return to life.

Article Abstract

Two anhydrobiotic strains of the cyanobacterium , namely CCMEE 029 and CCMEE 171, isolated from the Negev Desert in Israel and from the Dry Valleys in Antarctica, were exposed to salty-ice simulations. The aim of the experiment was to investigate the cyanobacterial capability to survive under sub-freezing temperatures in samples simulating the environment of icy worlds. The two strains were mixed with liquid solutions having sub-eutectic concentration of NaSO, MgSO and NaCl, then frozen down to different final temperatures (258 K, 233 K and 203 K) in various experimental runs. Both strains survived the exposure to 258 K in NaCl solution, probably as they migrated in the liquid veins between ice grain boundaries. However, they also survived at 258 K in NaSO and MgSO-salty-ice samples-that is, a temperature well below the eutectic temperature of the solutions, where liquid veins should not exist anymore. Moreover, both strains survived the exposure at 233 K in each salty-ice sample, with CCMEE 171 showing an enhanced survivability, whereas there were no survivors at 203 K. The survival limit at low temperature was further extended when both strains were exposed to 193 K as air-dried cells. The results suggest that vitrification might be a strategy for microbial life forms to survive in potentially habitable icy moons, for example in Europa's icy crust. By entering a dried, frozen state, they could be transported from niches, which became non-habitable to new habitable ones, and possibly return to metabolic activity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6958388PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life9040086DOI Listing

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