Title: Astrobiology
1Astrobiology Friday, February 13, 2009 Life in
Ice
2Life in Ice
- ice is the natural state or predominant form of
water in our solar system - the surfaces of most planets and moons are
currently at temperatures well below the freezing
point of pure water, including two of the more
promising sites in the search for traces of
extraterrestrial life, Mars and Europa - the amount of water-ice on Europa exceeds the
volume of liquid water on Earth - comets are icy bodies
- Earth may have undergone a series of complete or
near-complete glaciations in its history i.e.,
Snowball Earth
3Life in Ice
- the presence of the liquid phase of water,
however, is essential to the prospering of life
as we know it - in our Solar System, only Earth allows for a
planetary surface with abundant liquid water
4Life in Ice
Mars may have some liquid water in permafrost
beneath its surface, as well as having polar ice
caps composed of water ice, and evidence of
glaciers at lower latitudes during certain periods
5Life in Ice
- Europa and perhaps other moons of Jupiter have
water oceans below their icy crusts
6Why Investigate Life in Ice?
- studies of frozen environments on Earth further
our understanding of fundamental constraints on
the evolution of life at low temperatures - also provide valuable information on the
microbial diversity, the mechanisms for long term
survival and activity of microbial cells at
subzero temperatures, and the origin, evolution,
limits, and detectability of life on Earth (e.g.,
snowball Earth) and possibly on other planets
such as Mars and Europa
7Cryosphere
- the cryosphere is the portion of the Earth where
water is in solid form as snow or ice - the terrestrial cryosphere consists of two parts
glaciosphere (snow and ice) and frozen ground
(permafrost)
(Gilichinsky 2008)
8Cryosphere
- because of the extremely harsh climatic
conditions, these frozen environments had been
considered for a long time to be devoid of life
or serving merely as repositories for
wind-transported microorganisms trapped in the
ice - increasing number of recent studies on the
microbial ecology and diversity of natural ice
samples have shown that permanently frozen
environments harbor abundant, live and diverse
microorganisms that may be detected and recovered
by cultivation - the cryosphere is important not only as an
integral part of the global climate system, but
as one of the major habitable ecosystems of
Earths biosphere and as the best analogue for
the search of extraterrestrial life
9Life in Ice
- ice does not preclude the simultaneous presence
of a liquid phase - ice is rarely if ever formed from pure water
- the impurities in water on Earth (e.g., salts)
allow for the presence of liquid water as a
significant fraction of the ice volume - like virtually all natural waters on earth, this
remaining liquid is inhabited by microorganisms - the impurity effect allowing for liquid water
holds true even at temperatures approaching the
average surface temperature of Mars today (-55oC)
10Phase Diagram of Water
Phase diagram of pure water at high pressures,
showing the stability fields of liquid water (L)
and of ices I through VII. Ice I is the dominant
form of ice on Earth. Atmospheric pressure on
Earth corresponds to 10-3 kbar and the bottom of
a 1-km thick glacier to 0.1 kbar.
11Life in Ice
- water is bound in the solid phase on Earth in
five major types of ice formations
(Deming Eicken 2008)
12Life in Ice
- the total amount of liquid water present at
sub-freezing temperatures, as a result of salt
and other impurities, within all ice formations
exceeds the volume of freshwater flowing in all
rivers
(Deming Eicken 2008)
13Liquid Water and Life on Planets
- temperature scale for the presence of liquid
water on earth and for observed enzyme activity
and growth of microorganisms (Bacteria and
Archaea) - more complex organisms (Eukarya) occupy a more
restrictive thermal range - average surface temperatures on Mars (-55oC) and
Europa (-160oC) are also shown.
14Phase Diagram for the System NaCl-H2O
- the importance of water as a prerequisite for
life on Earth derives in large part from the
polar nature of the water molecule and its role
as a solvent for ionic and other compounds - the same molecular properties and electrostatic
forces governing the interaction between water,
ionic compounds, and many other types of organic
compounds are also critical for freezing-point
depression that allows the survival and activity
of microorganisms at subzero temperatures
A saturated solution of NaCl depresses the
freezing point of water to -21.2oC.
15Single Snow Crystal
16Structure of Ice
17Nucleation and Growth of Ice Crystals
18Ice Formation
19Life in Ice
- at the lowest temperatures of ice on Earth, and
thus for our best analogues to the frozen
environments on Mars and Europa, salt or organic
impurities are essential to the presence of
liquid water within the ice - thermal gradients across an ice formation can
even allow fluids to flow within the ice on a
scale relevant to microorganisms
20Life in Ice
- from a microbial perspective, even a fraction of
a microlitre of water contained within a block of
ice represents a luxurious water world - critical to that water being supportive of
ongoing metabolism and growth, however, is the
presence of connections between numerous liquid
niches an open system allows for the essential
exchange of nutrients and waste products by
diffusion or advection (carrying of materials or
molecules vis small-scale currents)
Trapped mineral fragments associated with
microbial communities appear inside ice
(Credit Kjell Ove Storvik/AMASE)
21Tree of Life
- highlights branches containing cold-adapted
species, whether psychrophilic (thick black
lines) or psychrotolerant (gray lines)
22Microbiology of Ice
- bacteria are known to be present in significant
numbers in all types of natural ice formations on
Earth - the diversity of bacteria in frozen environments,
unlike other extreme environments such as
hydrothermal vents, is poorly known - the question is still unresolved whether
microbial cells simply survive trapped frozen in
glacial ice for hundreds of thousands of years or
are they metabolically active and responsible for
certain natural processes,
23Characteristics of Snow and Glacier Ice as
Microbial Habitats
- glacier ice is a unique ecosystem preserving
microbial life and past climate changes
chronologically for hundreds of thousands of
years - most of the glacier ice on Earth is represented
by the ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica
corresponding to about 10 of Earths terrestrial
surface and containing 77 of the fresh water on
the planet - glacier ice depths range from few hundred meters
to 34 km with a gradual increase of temperature
with depth, e.g., at the South Pole it ranges
from about -50C on the surface to -6C to -10C
in the deepest layers - there are two types of microbial habitats in
glacier ice - the liquid veins and the thin
liquid film on the surfaces of mineral grains
24Characteristics of Snow and Glacier Ice as
Microbial Habitats
- another specific microbial habitat existing on
the surface of glacier ice are cryoconite holes - they contain abundant populations of active
living organisms - since each one of these mini-environments is
usually spatially separated, cryoconite holes are
drawing attention as model systems for microbial
activity and adaptation to cold
25- SEM images of microbial populations, present in a
3,043-m-deep Greenland ice core sample A,B small
sized cells of different morphologies and a
diatom fragment with smaller cells attached to
its surface in the melted ice C,D thin
filamentous and small coccoid cells in a
50-day-old liquid medium culture along with thick
filaments and cells with unusual structure E
glacier ice isolate (Cryobacterium) with
pleomorphic cell shapes F glacier ice isolate
(Sphingomonas) embedded in extracellular
material. (Photo credit V. Miteva)
26The Subglacial Lake Vostok System, Antarctica
- geophysical surveys in the Antarctica have
revealed the existence of 145 subglacial lakes - of all the subglacial Antarctic lakes identified
to date, Subglacial Lake Vostok is by far the
largest with a surface area gt14,000 km2, volume
of 5,400 1,600 km3, and maximum depth of 800 m
Location of Lake Vostok, Antarctica
27The Subglacial Lake Vostok System, Antarctica
Location of Lake Vostok, Antarctica
28Possible Chemically-Driven Biogeochemical
Reactions in Lake Vostok
The melting of the basal ice provides crushed
sulfide and iron minerals and organic material
from the bedrock, and glacial ice provides a
constant supply of oxidants (O2 and NO3-),
nutrients, and organic material. Microbes,
minerals, and organic carbon are removed from the
lake via the accretion ice (southern portion of
the lake). Shown are oxic and
anoxic chemolithotrophic reactions (i.e., metal
sulfide oxidation). Fault vents may be present in
the, which could introduce significant amounts of
thermal energy, geochemical energy, and organic
carbon to the lake.
29Microbial Life in Ice, Lake Vostok
- microscopic analyses of samples from the accreted
Lake Vostok ice revealed several different
bacteria including (A) a coccoid-shaped
bacterium (far right), (B) a rod-shaped
bacterium, (C) an SEM image of a coccoid
bacterium shown at a magnification of 1.5 x 105,
and (D) an SEM image of the same rod-shaped
bacterium as in (B). Karl et al. (2008)
30Bacterial Abundance in Ice
31Bacterial Diversity
- the diversity of bacteria in frozen environments
such as in glacier ice and snow, unlike other
extreme environments such as hydrothermal vents,
is poorly known - most of them are psychrophilic and
psychrotolerant, many are oligotrophic and
pigmented - the majority are related to species known for
their versatile metabolic properties and high
resistance to stress associated with their
environment, such as long-term freezing,
freeze-thaw cycles, desiccation, solar radiation,
and occupation of microniches
32Lowest Known Temperatures for Bacterial Activity
in Ice
(Deming Eicken 2008)
33Bacteria in Permafrost
- most colonized part of the cryosphere is
represented by modern frost-affected soils and
permafrost with cells adsorbed on organic or
mineral particles
34Bacteria in Permafrost
- the term permafrost designates the permanently
frozen groundsoil or rock that remains at or
below 0C for at least two consecutive years
- it reflects a thermodynamic balance between
ground surface temperature, which is controlled
by air temperature, and the geothermal gradient
35Bacteria in Permafrost
- significant numbers of viable ancient
microorganisms are known to be present within the
permafrost - they have been isolated in both polar regions
from the cores up to 400 m deep and ground
temperatures of -27C - the age of the cells corresponds to the longevity
of the permanently frozen state of the soils,
with the oldest cells dating back to 3 million
years in the Arctic, and 5 million years in the
Antarctic - they are the only life forms known to have
retained viability over geological time
36Anaerobic Bacteria in Permafrost
- permafrost contains both aerobic and anaerobic
bacteria - in addition, the reducing conditions within the
permafrost are more favorable for the
preservation of anaerobic bacteria
37Anaerobic Bacteria in Permafrost
- micrographs of methanogenic permafrost isolates.
Methanosarcina mazei strain JL01 a phase
contrast image, bar 10 mm b ultrathin section,
bar 0.5 mm. Methanobacterium sp. Strain M2 c
phase contrast image, bar 10 mm d ultrathin
section, bar 0.5 mm. Methanobacterium sp. strain
MK4 e phase contrast image, bar 10 mm f
ultrathin section, bar 0.5 mm. Pph, polyphosphate
inclusions Clc, cyst-like cells (Photo of N.
Suzina)
38Environmental Conditions in Ice
- high salinity (up to 250 g l-1)
- low temperature (as low as 20o C)
- poor light
- lack of nutrition
39Coping Mechanisms
- form into cysts robust, thick-walled dormant
cells (e.g., dinoflagellates) - hibernation
- produce organic compounds that act as antifreeze
- in high salt environments, may take up additional
inorganic ions or produce organic compounds to
prevent water loss from osmosis - under low light conditions, produce more of their
primary pigment (chlorophyll)
40Environmental Conditions on Land
- no visible life on surfaces of soil and rock
- in certain rock types (e.g., sandstone, marble),
a narrow subsurface zone provides a favorable
microclimate for microorganism colonization - survive by changing their mode of growth -
growing into the pore space and fractures of
rocks - mobilize inorganic ions in minerals by leaching
(biomineralization)
41Carbonate
42(No Transcript)
43- cyanobacteria present on the cleavage surfaces of
calcite crystals isolated from metamorphosed
carbonate rocks of Marblehead, Antarctica
44Prokaryotic Limit to Growth and Survival