Title: PHYS2010
1PHYS2010 Life in The Cosmos Extremophiles!
2Question think of an environment on Earth where
life could not exist
It survives in the heavy water in the centre of
nuclear reactors It survives in volcanoes It
survives, even flourishes, at the bottoms of the
Oceans
3Introduction
- What are extremophiles?
- Importance of temperature, pH pressure
- Examples of extreme ecosystems
4What does the word mean?
5Even polyextremophiles!
6?
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7A Extreme drying / drying out of a living
organism
Q What is Dessication ?
8Tardigrades water bears
- The first tardigrades were
- discovered by Goetz in 1773.
- Over 400 species have been described since that
time. - Tardigrades grow only to a size of about 1mm, but
they can easily be seen with a microscope. - Tardigrade bodies are short, plump, and contain
four pairs of limbs - Each limb terminates in four to eight claws or
discs. They lumber about in a slow bear-like gait
over sand
grains or pieces of plant material
9(please dont mention these experiments to the
animal rights people)
10What does extreme mean?
- If a thermophile that normally lives at 100C can
die at 21C, or a piezophile from the ocean
bottom dies at surface pressure, what do we mean
by extreme environment?
11Definitions of extreme
- Different from some fiducial environment?
- Subjective with respect to human preferences?
- Objective with respect to lifes original, but
UNKNOWN, location ?
12Who is extreme?
- Extreme values of any particular property (pH,
T, salinity) are simply values far from the
median for that eco variable - e.g. water-based life requires ability to
control cells T, pH, internal solutes (fuel,
building blocks, etc.), biomolecules, electric
potential gradients, and be able to repair
damage. Anything that varies from these
conditions we regard as extreme
13Role of Temperature
- Solubility of gases goes down as temp goes up
(impetus for colonisation of land?) - Organisms have upper temp limits. Chlorophyll,
proteins and nucleic acid denature at high
temperatures. - Enzymes have optimal temperatures for activity
slow down at low temps. - At low temp water freezes crystals then break up
membranes etc. (but the expansion of water to ice
means layers of ice insulate water below for
most liquids lakes would freeze from bottom up)
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15pH limits
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17 Rotifers
Complex, multicellular animals with a size range
from roughly 40 microns to over 2,000 microns.
They are in virtually every lake and stream,
every pond, on bits of moss in moist forest, in
the tropics and even in icy arctic terrains
18Grylloblatids Pyschrophiles who live in the cold
on the tops of mountains
Their discoverer was obviously a bit confused by
their appearance The first species named was
Grylloblatta campodeiformis, which means "It
looks like a cricket, a cockroach, and a
Campodea"
19PRESSURE
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21This is Life which has never seen The Sun, but
has a completely different energy source many km
below ocean surface (? any old energy will do!!)
22Mars
Surface Temp
210K
Atms Pressure
0.007 bars
Atms makeup
95 CO2
Gravity
38 earth
Other
High radiation levels
23Venus
Surface temp
737K
Atms pressure
92 bars
Atms makeup
96 CO2 sulphuric acid clouds
Surface gravity
88 earth
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25Question are we extreme?
- .since oxygen is responsible for significant
damage (oxidation) to nucleic acids, proteins,
and lipids, WE are extremophiles! !
26Good news for life elsewhere in the Comos maybe
even in our own solar system
27- What have we learnt thats important for Life in
the Cosmos? - Life seems to be able to adapt to very extreme
environments - Life can survive for long periods in stasis and
then recover - Life can change its environment (oxygen)
- ? more about this in the movie on Monday