| Literature DB >> 28955310 |
Ebbe N Bak1, Michael G Larsen1, Ralf Moeller2, Silas B Nissen1, Lasse R Jensen1, Per Nørnberg1, Svend J K Jensen3, Kai Finster1,4.
Abstract
The habitability of Mars is determined by the physical and chemical environment. The effect of low water availability, temperature, low atmospheric pressure and strong UV radiation has been extensively studied in relation to the survival of microorganisms. In addition to these stress factors, it was recently found that silicates exposed to simulated saltation in a Mars-like atmosphere can lead to a production of reactive oxygen species. Here, we have investigated the stress effect induced by quartz and basalt abraded in Mars-like atmospheres by examining the survivability of the three microbial model organisms Pseudomonas putida, Bacillus subtilis, and Deinococcus radiodurans upon exposure to the abraded silicates. We found that abraded basalt that had not been in contact with oxygen after abrasion killed more than 99% of the vegetative cells while endospores were largely unaffected. Exposure of the basalt samples to oxygen after abrasion led to a significant reduction in the stress effect. Abraded quartz was generally less toxic than abraded basalt. We suggest that the stress effect of abraded silicates may be caused by a production of reactive oxygen species and enhanced by transition metal ions in the basalt leading to hydroxyl radicals through Fenton-like reactions. The low survivability of the usually highly resistant D. radiodurans indicates that the effect of abraded silicates, as is ubiquitous on the Martian surface, would limit the habitability of Mars as well as the risk of forward contamination. Furthermore, the reactivity of abraded silicates could have implications for future manned missions, although the lower effect of abraded silicates exposed to oxygen suggests that the effects would be reduced in human habitats.Entities:
Keywords: erosion; forward contamination; habitability; microorganisms; reactive oxygen species; saltation; stress factors; toxicity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28955310 PMCID: PMC5601068 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2017.01709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1(A) Sealed quartz ampoules with basalt (left) and quartz sand (right). (B) Turning wheel running at 30 rpm. The ampoules were fixed inside the gray boxes. (C) Media inoculated with cell cultures. (D) Abraded silicate samples mixed with washed cell cultures. (E) Agar plates with colonies of the tested bacteria.
Bacterial strains used in this study.
| DSM6125 | Wild type (mt-2 KT2440) | DSMZ |
| DSM20539 (type strain) | Wild type (R1) | DSMZ |
| DSM402 | Wild type (168) | DSMZ |
| PS832 | Wild type parent of PS356 | P. Setlow (Slieman and Nicholson, |
| PY79 (PE594) | Wild type parent of PE277, PE618, PE620, and PE1720, prototroph | P. Eichenberger (Raguse et al., |
| PE277 | P. Eichenberger (Raguse et al., | |
| PE618 | P. Eichenberger (Raguse et al., | |
| PE620 | P. Eichenberger (Raguse et al., | |
| PE1720 | P. Eichenberger (Raguse et al., | |
| PS356 | P. Setlow (Mason and Setlow, | |
The corresponding spore deficiency for the B. subtilis mutants can be found in Table .
Cm.
German Collection of Microorganisms and Cell Cultures GmbH (Braunschweig, Germany).
Figure 2The percentage of CFU of P. putida harvested in the exponential growth phase (A) and in the stationary phase (B) in a PBS control (—X—) and after addition of abraded quartz () and basalt () relative to the starting concentration of ~106 CFU/ml. The survival of P. putida is shown for experiments with inactivated silicates (orange) and abraded silicates kept anoxic (blue). The error bars show the SEM, and the asterisks indicate that the number of CFU was below the LOD.
Figure 3The percentage of CFU of B. subtilis harvested in the exponential growth phase (A) and in the stationary phase (B) in a PBS control (—X—) and after addition of abraded quartz () and basalt () relative to the starting concentration of ~106 CFU/ml. The minimum and maximum number of CFU in the PBS control replicates are marked by the gray area. The survival of B. subtilis is shown for experiments with inactivated silicates (orange) and abraded silicates kept anoxic (blue). The error bars show the SEM, and the asterisks indicate that the number of CFU was below the LOD.
The percentage of CFU of B. subtilis spores relative to the starting concentration following exposure to PBS, inactivated basalt and basalt for 24 h.
| PE594 (wt) | none | none | 82 ± 7 | 76 ± 3 | 73 ± 5 |
| PE620 | Crust | 113 ± 8 | 64 ± 4 | 64 ± 2 | |
| PE618 | Outer coat | 75 ± 7 | 92 ± 5 | 97 ± 5 | |
| PE277 | Inner coat | 55 ± 3 | 75 ± 2 | 59 ± 7 | |
| PE1720 | Inner and outer spore coat | 82 ± 2 | 113 ± 4 | 63 ± 5 | |
| PS832 (wt) | none | none | 111 ± 5 | 73 ± 2 | 87 ± 17 |
| PS356 | Major α- and β-type SASP | 36 ± 11 | 25 ± 4 | 40 ± 2 | |
The basalt was kept anoxic. The results are the average of three replicates ± SEM. PE594 is the wild-type of the other PE strains while PS832 is the wild-type of the PS356 strain.
Figure 4The survival of D. radiodurans harvested in the exponential growth phase (A) and in the stationary phase (B) in the PBS control (—X—) and after addition of abraded quartz () and basalt () relative to the starting concentration of ~106 CFU/ml. The survival of D. radiodurans is shown for experiments with inactivated silicates (orange) and abraded silicates kept anoxic (blue). The error bars show the SEM, and the asterisks indicate that the number of CFU was below the LOD.
The relative number of CFU 24 h after addition of abraded quartz or basalt (average % of initial concentration ± SEM).
| Exponential growth | 503 ± 116 | 3, 070 ± 480 | 77 ± 27 | 9.2 ± 1.9 | 1, 380 ± 340 | 634 ± 48 | below LOD | |
| Stationary | 158 ± 7 | 97 ± 7 | 156 ± 63 | 93 ± 6 | 561 ± 35 | 288 ± 38 | 1.2 ± 0.5 | |
| Exponential growth | 0.39 ± 0.31 | below LOD | below LOD | 1.2 ± 0.2 | below LOD | 0.026 ± 0.005 | 0.035 ± 0.013 | |
| Stationary | 85 ± 6 | 70 ± 2 | 66 ± 5 | 80 ± 3 | 72 ± 8 | 69 ± 2 | 76 ± 7 | |
| Exponential growth | 82 ± 19 | 145 ± 29 | 30 ± 4 | 94 ± 7 | 174 ± 15 | 12 ± 4 | below LOD | |
| Stationary | 74 ± 12 | 46 ± 26 | 71 ± 8 | 58 ± 13 | 116 ( | 15 ± 12 | below LOD |
A part of the data is shown as end-points in Figures .