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Space Channel

 
Brewing Sulfur with Martian Water
Life Summary (Mar 03, 2004): If the very high sulfur content found at the Opportunity landing site points to its aqueous history, then what speculative biology could take advantage of brewing sulfur with water. According to one Mars' veteran, there are fascinating extreme microbes that can make good use of these chemical combinations.

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opportunity_soil

Brewing Sulfur with Martian Water

Biological Toil and Trouble?

by Astrobiology Magazine staffwriter

During Tuesday's NASA mission briefing on progress with the rover at Meridiani Planum, Mars Exploration Rover (MER) principal invesigator, Steve Squyres introduced not just startling new water evidence, but another new piece to the bigger astrobiological puzzle: water and sulfur. "With this quantity of sulfate [up to forty percent sulfur salts at some places near the Opportunity landing site], you kind of have to have water involved."

early_mars
Liquid water may have flowed episodically over the surface of Mars in the planet's distant past. Artist conception of a delta filling a crater.
Credit: NASA

But water is just the first puzzle piece in any future biological picture for the red planet, according to mission scientists. This sentiment was underscored by considering just a few of the puzzle pieces still missing. Time for instance is one element yet to be considered. "We know that the essential major and minor biogenic elements exist on Mars," wrote Rocco Mancinelli , a SETI Institute scientist, "The primary factor in determining if life could have arisen on Mars lies in determining if liquid water existed on its surface for sufficient time. The history of water lies within the mineralogy of the rocks."

Habitability and Energy

But now that some local portions of Mars show mineralogical promise of just such water at least temporarily 'soaked' into their geological record, what other key ingredients might be needed next, particularly to have supported a convincing case for ancient habitability? The tough question begs for a comparison to what microbiologists know about life on Earth, so one must begin with a simpler experiment: How would a hardy Earth microbe survive today on Mars?

Not particularly well, according to most microbiologists. The compound problems of low temperatures, low pressures, and scarce energy are multifold on today's Mars, even when 'today' is taken to include the last tens of millions of years in Mars' meteorological history.

Compared to the Earth's average temperature of 15 C (59 F), Mars globally has an average temperature of -53 C (-63.4 F). While transient temperatures do occasionally rise above water's freezing point in the equatorial regions around both landing sites, most biological scenarios need a booster shot of basic warmth. A habitable case for the red planet usually posits a former, warmer ancient Mars--one that was both wetter and warmer than what might seem hostile to even the hardiest lifeforms known today.

The Next Generation of Better Microbes, Desulfotomaculum

But once a water source is identified, perhaps the bigger immediate problem on Mars is the very thin and unbreathable atmosphere, one that is a mere one percent of Earth's sea level pressure. A microbe today on Mars would quickly dessicate and freeze if exposed on the surface. That is, unless it could pull off a relatively common microbial trick once the environment turned extreme to its favored biology. A promising microbial candidate must evolve some means to sporulate, as it would prove a big plus to hibernate during long periods whenever Martian weather turned inhospitable.

mars_life
Close-up of famous shapes measuring 20 to 200 nanometers across in Allen Hills meteorite [ALH84001], found at Allen Hills, Antarctica, showing what has generated debate and controversy around claims of ancient fossilized microbial life. "Several lines of evidence suggest that the volume of a sphere about 200 nanometers across is needed to house the chemistry of a cell that has a biology familiar to us." --A. Knoll Around 28 Mars meteorites have been identified so far.
Image Credit: NASA

Scientists intrigued by ancient--and so far, local-- water evidence uncovered near the Opportunity site have posed the speculative question: would a spore-forming, sulfate-reducing bacteria offer a new model organism for the next generation of Mars' microbe hunters?

According to one veteran Viking and MER science team member, Benton Clark, one such candidate has been a leading contender for weathering the harsh martian conditions that could otherwise fatally stress a microbe. Clark, of Lockheed Martin in Denver, said "I've always had a favorite organism, Desulfotomaculum, which is an organism that can live off sulfate, as we find in these rocks."

Since 1965, when the spore-former was first discovered and classified, its biology has offered some the best extremes for microbial survival. Living without sunlight while forming spores when the weather gets cold or dry could make this hardy organism a model to consider among planetary scientists.

Primitive Solar Energy Independence

Loosely, the name Desulfotomaculum means a 'sausage' that reduces sulfur compounds. It is a rod-shaped organism; the Latin, -tomaculum, means 'sausage'. Desulfotomaculum is an anaerobe, meaning it does not require oxygen. Terrestrially, it is found in soil, water, and geothermal regions, and in the intestines of insects and animal rumens. Its lifecycle depends on reducing sulfur compounds like magnesium sulfate (or epsom salts) to hydrogen sulfide.

The sulfur-metabolizing microbes use a very primitive form of energy generation: their chemical action is as important as their immediate habitat. From what we know about conditions on the early Earth, it was probably hot, and there was a lot of ultraviolet (UV). It was a reducing atmosphere, so things like hydrogen sulfide as an inorganic source of energy are probably what was available to use. On Earth, some Desulfotomaculum species grow optimally at 30-37 C but can grow at other temperatures depending on which of the nearly 20 species of Desulfotomaculum is being cultured.

On the frigid, dry red planet so far from the Sun, anything that metabolizes successfully would also require some novel pathways other than photosynthesis to produce energy. Surprisingly while radiation hazards on Mars can be trecherous, the lack of light itself is an immediate problem for what might be useful to common green or chlorophyll-rich life on Earth.

mars_pole
Round spore of sulfur-reducing bacterium. Banner image shows rod-shaped Desulfotomaculum in its unsporulated, 'free-tumbling' form and in sulfate-rich water.
Image Credit: Mazák Károly, sulinet.hu

"[Desulfotomaculum] needs some hydrogen to go with that, but [sulfur] is its energy source. It can work independent of the sun," said Clark. "The reason I like the latter organism is because it can form spores as well, so it can hibernate over these interim times on Mars between the warmer spells and the differences in [solar] obliquity that we know about."

"So in addition to physical evidence of fossils," said Clark, "you can have chemical evidence. It turns out that sulfur is one of those tracers that work out quite well in isotopic fractionation. When living organisms process sulfur, they tend to fractionate isotopes differently from geological or mineralogical ways...So there are organisms and isotopic ways to look for it. To do the isotopic analysis, you're probably going to have the samples back on Earth."

Preserving Life

MIT geologist, John Grotzinger, took up the challenging question of how a future mission planner might begin to formulate an overall biological strategy. After successfully landing near this kind of outcrop at the Opportunity site, can a future Mars' mission look for evidence of fossil life? "The answer to this question is very simple. On Earth, which is the only experience that we have, finding fossils preserved in ancient rocks is very rare. You have to do everything you can to optimize the situation for their preservation."

From the outset of the Opportunity mission, Andrew Knoll, a Harvard paleontologist and member of the MER science team told Astrobiology Magazine that, "The real question that one wants to keep in mind when thinking about Meridiani is: What, if any, signatures of that biology actually get preserved in diagenetically stable rocks? ..If water is present on the Martian surface for 100 years every 10 million years, that's not very interesting for biology. If it's present for 10 million years, that's very interesting."

"You worry first about preservation," emphasized Grotzinger. "You target your strategy to optimize preservation. If something was there, these [conditions can be] ideal for time capsules..but it is something of a challenge. ...We want to urge caution in interpreting these results at this point."

"Stay tuned," concluded Squyres.

Related Web Pages

Could Opportunity Find Life on Mars?
Rocco Mancinelli
Evidence of bacteria on Europa?
Primordial Recipe: Spark and Stir
Prospecting for Viruses
SETI Institute
NSF Life in Extreme Environments (LEXEN) Program
Introduction to the Archaea - Life's extremists
Life without Volcanic Heat

Note: Life
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Wednesday, March 03, 2004
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