Title: Anhydrobiosis: Life without water
1AnhydrobiosisLife without water
2Water
- Solvent for all Biochemical reactions in cells.
- Essential for the maintenance of lipid bilayers
(cell and organelle membranes).
3Without water you die!
Maintaining water balance is essential for life
or is it?
4How much can you lose?
of Body Water lost before death.
Humans 14
(Some) Frogs 50
Alpine Cockroaches 57
5Antony van Leeuwenhoek (1632-1723)
- Dutch microscopist
- Put the microscope to good biological use,
discovering several phyla, Bacteria, sperm cells
6- on the third of September, about seven in the
morning. I took some of the dry sediment, which
I had taken out of the leaden gutter and had
stood almost two days in my study, and put a
little of it into two separate glass tubes,
wherein I poured some rain water which had been
boiled and afterwards cooled..
7- As soon as I had poured on the water, I stirred
the whole about and when it had settled to the
bottom of the glass, I examined it, and perceived
some of the Animalcules lying closely heaped
together. In a short time afterwards they began
to extend their bodies, and in half an hour at
least a hundred of them were swimming about the
glass
van Leeuwenhoek, 1702
8Anhydrobiosis
- Life Without Water
- The ability to dry out completely and rehydrate
again. - Employed by small aquatic animals
(micrometazoa), protozoa, bacteria and plants
9Some Anhydrobiotes
- Tardigrades (water bears)
- Nematodes
- Rotifers
- Springtails
- Midge Larvae
10Anhydrobiotic animals
- Are all small
- Have little/no control over water loss out of
their body - Are generally aquatic inhabitants of ephemerally
wet habitats.
11Tardigrades
- Water Bears or Moss animals, live on the thin
film of water on hydrated mosses, in soil, and in
temporary pools. - Many species are cosmopolitan, found from
Greenland to Antarctica and everywhere in between.
12Polypedilum vanderplankii
- Midge larva
- Ephemeral pools in W. Africa
- Largest known anhydrobiont
13Drying Out 1. Buying Time
- Anhydrobionts must slow down the rate of water
loss to allow them to make the necessary
preparations
14Reducing sav ratio
15Structural changes
- As the animal shrinks, membranes fold and cell
organelles are packed tightly together.
16Drying Membranes and Proteins
- The structure of membranes is dependent on the
presence of water. - Proteins also denature when dried, as their
structure is also dependent on interactions with
water - If membrane structure is lost, then the animal is
as good as dead
17TrehaloseThe magic sugar?
18Drying begins, coiling/contraction/Tun to reduce
rate of water loss.
100
Production of Trehalose Packing of cellular
organelles
Permeability slump
Fully Hydrated
Water content of Animal
gt99 of water gone
Anhydrobiotic
0
Time
19Once Dry
- Without water there can be no biochemical
reactions - Metabolism declines beyond detectable levels
(0.01 of normal)
20While dry,
- No water left to freeze or boil
- No active cell processes to be disrupted
21Dry Insults
- Polypedilum vanderplanki can survive liquid
helium temperatures (-262 ºC), and 102 ºC. - Tardigrades can survive vacuum, radiation,
anoxia, high temperatures (140 ºC) and high
pressure (6000 atmospheres). - Utsugi Noda (1995) found that Tardigrades could
survive preparation for SEM! - Tardigrades can survive in space!
22Rumours of Immortality
- Most anhydrobionts belong to groups that normally
live only a few days or weeks but - Tardigrades have recovered from herbarium
specimens over 100 years old - Some dry soils in Antarctica have not been wet
for millenia - Closer examination indicates that recovery is
not survival, and there are no confirmed records
of Tardigrades surviving more than 7 years.
23Anhydrobiosis in the Real World
- Anhydrobiosis is a genuine strategy for surviving
extreme environments - allows animals to survive long periods without
water - in this state they have increased tolerance to
environmental extremes - possibly also useful as a dispersal strategy.
24Scottnema lindsayae
- Soil Nematode found in McMurdo Dry Valleys,
Antarctica. - Acute shortage of water (almost no precipitation
and very dry air) - Very low temperatures in winter (lt-50 ºC)
25Scottnema lindsayae
- 80 of Nematodes are Anhydrobiotic at any given
time. - When Anhydrobiotic
- Dont grow or reproduce
- Survive all possible environmental conditions.
26Scottnema lindsayae
- When Fully hydrated, takes 280 days to complete
life cycle. - Water is not available all year
- Nematodes use a waiting strategy and develop only
during periods of favourable conditions. - How long to complete life cycle in field??
27Artemia cysts
- Live in salty, ephemeral habitats
- Eggs are layed and develop to gastrula (4000
cells), encyst and dehydrate when water body
dries up. - Cysts rehydrate develop when wet
28Artemia cysts
- Easily stored and posted (Sea Monkeys, fish
food) - Survival of high temperatures essential as cysts
may be on surface of depressions in deserts (eg
California and Middle East)
29Anhydrobiosis on other worlds