Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation

The future search-for-life missions to Mars - ESA/Roscosmos’s ExoMars2020 and NASA’s Mars2020 rovers - will carry Raman spectrometers for in situ analysis of extraterrestrial material for the first time1,2. The question remains whether signs of extinct or extant life could be detected by this method...

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Main Authors: Baque, Mickael, Böttger, Ute, Leya, T., Moeller, Ralf, de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/125694/
https://elib.dlr.de/125694/1/Baqu%C3%A9%20abstract%20GEORAMAN2018.pdf
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spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:125694 2024-05-19T07:28:55+00:00 Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation Baque, Mickael Böttger, Ute Leya, T. Moeller, Ralf de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul 2018 application/pdf https://elib.dlr.de/125694/ https://elib.dlr.de/125694/1/Baqu%C3%A9%20abstract%20GEORAMAN2018.pdf en eng https://elib.dlr.de/125694/1/Baqu%C3%A9%20abstract%20GEORAMAN2018.pdf Baque, Mickael und Böttger, Ute und Leya, T. und Moeller, Ralf und de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul (2018) Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation. XIII GeoRaman International Conference, 2018-06-10 - 2018-06-14, Catania, Italy. Leitungsbereich PF Strahlenbiologie Terahertz- und Laserspektroskopie Konferenzbeitrag NonPeerReviewed 2018 ftdlr 2024-04-25T00:48:28Z The future search-for-life missions to Mars - ESA/Roscosmos’s ExoMars2020 and NASA’s Mars2020 rovers - will carry Raman spectrometers for in situ analysis of extraterrestrial material for the first time1,2. The question remains whether signs of extinct or extant life could be detected by this method. From our terrestrial examples, carotenoids (e.g. serving in cyanobacteria as accessory and photoprotective pigments) have been extensively used as biosignature models due to their stability and easy identification by Raman spectroscopy with a 532nm excitation wavelength3. Evaluating the detection limit of pigments under simulated extraterrestrial conditions is beneficial for the success of future life-detection missions. Ionizing radiation can be considered the most deleterious factor for the long term preservation of potential biomarkers on Mars4. Here, we report on the preservation potential of Raman signatures in the Antarctic cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. strain CCCryo 231–06 after high doses of gamma irradiation performed in the frame of the STARLIFE project5. The carotenoids' signals usually dominate the Raman spectra at 532nm excitation wavelength due to resonance effects. But comparing their distribution and quantifying their preservation is still problematic in natural samples. To standardize the analyses, we successfully applied Raman mapping and signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) masks to quantify the effects of irradiation. The typical in vivo Raman signatures of carotenoids could be detected even after exposure to up to 56 kGy with significant deterioration in terms of signal coverage and SNR. However, for colonies embedded in two different Martian mineral analogues (phyllosilicatic and sulfatic Mars regolith simulants), the carotenoids' signatures remained detectable even after the highest dose of γ-rays (117kGy) tested in this study, with no significant effect on signal coverage or SNRs. Carotenoids proved again their scientific value as model biosignatures for future life detection missions on Mars. Data ... Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library
institution Open Polar
collection German Aerospace Center: elib - DLR electronic library
op_collection_id ftdlr
language English
topic Leitungsbereich PF
Strahlenbiologie
Terahertz- und Laserspektroskopie
spellingShingle Leitungsbereich PF
Strahlenbiologie
Terahertz- und Laserspektroskopie
Baque, Mickael
Böttger, Ute
Leya, T.
Moeller, Ralf
de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation
topic_facet Leitungsbereich PF
Strahlenbiologie
Terahertz- und Laserspektroskopie
description The future search-for-life missions to Mars - ESA/Roscosmos’s ExoMars2020 and NASA’s Mars2020 rovers - will carry Raman spectrometers for in situ analysis of extraterrestrial material for the first time1,2. The question remains whether signs of extinct or extant life could be detected by this method. From our terrestrial examples, carotenoids (e.g. serving in cyanobacteria as accessory and photoprotective pigments) have been extensively used as biosignature models due to their stability and easy identification by Raman spectroscopy with a 532nm excitation wavelength3. Evaluating the detection limit of pigments under simulated extraterrestrial conditions is beneficial for the success of future life-detection missions. Ionizing radiation can be considered the most deleterious factor for the long term preservation of potential biomarkers on Mars4. Here, we report on the preservation potential of Raman signatures in the Antarctic cyanobacterium Nostoc sp. strain CCCryo 231–06 after high doses of gamma irradiation performed in the frame of the STARLIFE project5. The carotenoids' signals usually dominate the Raman spectra at 532nm excitation wavelength due to resonance effects. But comparing their distribution and quantifying their preservation is still problematic in natural samples. To standardize the analyses, we successfully applied Raman mapping and signal-to-noise ratios (SNR) masks to quantify the effects of irradiation. The typical in vivo Raman signatures of carotenoids could be detected even after exposure to up to 56 kGy with significant deterioration in terms of signal coverage and SNR. However, for colonies embedded in two different Martian mineral analogues (phyllosilicatic and sulfatic Mars regolith simulants), the carotenoids' signatures remained detectable even after the highest dose of γ-rays (117kGy) tested in this study, with no significant effect on signal coverage or SNRs. Carotenoids proved again their scientific value as model biosignatures for future life detection missions on Mars. Data ...
format Conference Object
author Baque, Mickael
Böttger, Ute
Leya, T.
Moeller, Ralf
de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
author_facet Baque, Mickael
Böttger, Ute
Leya, T.
Moeller, Ralf
de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul
author_sort Baque, Mickael
title Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation
title_short Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation
title_full Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation
title_fullStr Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation
title_full_unstemmed Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation
title_sort protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ raman signatures by martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation
publishDate 2018
url https://elib.dlr.de/125694/
https://elib.dlr.de/125694/1/Baqu%C3%A9%20abstract%20GEORAMAN2018.pdf
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation https://elib.dlr.de/125694/1/Baqu%C3%A9%20abstract%20GEORAMAN2018.pdf
Baque, Mickael und Böttger, Ute und Leya, T. und Moeller, Ralf und de Vera, Jean Pierre Paul (2018) Protection of cyanobacterial carotenoids’ Raman signatures by Martian mineral analogues after high dose gamma irradiation. XIII GeoRaman International Conference, 2018-06-10 - 2018-06-14, Catania, Italy.
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