Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection

Astrobiology seeks to understand the limits of life and to determine the physiology of organisms in order to better assess the habitability of other worlds. To successfully achieve these goals we require microorganisms from environments on Earth that approximate to extraterrestrial environments in t...

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Main Authors: Cockell, C. S., Schwendner, P., Perras, A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/41071/
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/international-journal-of-astrobiology/article/anaerobic-microorganisms-in-astrobiological-analogue-environments-from-field-site-to-culture-collection/2C40A666C4D4F2BFEA64C08C57357B5E
https://doi.org/10.5283/epub.41071
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author Cockell, C. S.
Schwendner, P.
Perras, A.
author_facet Cockell, C. S.
Schwendner, P.
Perras, A.
author_sort Cockell, C. S.
collection University of Regensburg Publication Server
description Astrobiology seeks to understand the limits of life and to determine the physiology of organisms in order to better assess the habitability of other worlds. To successfully achieve these goals we require microorganisms from environments on Earth that approximate to extraterrestrial environments in terms of physical and/or chemical conditions. The most challenging of these environments with respect to sample collection, isolation and cultivation of microorganisms are anoxic environments. In this paper, an approach to this challenge was implemented within the European Union's MASE (Mars Analogues for Space Exploration) project. In this review paper, we aim to provide a set of methods for future field work and sampling campaigns. A number of anoxic environment based on characteristics that make them analogous to past and present locations on Mars were selected. They included anoxic sulphur-rich springs (Germany), the salt-rich Boulby Mine (UK), a lake in a basaltic context (Iceland), acidic sediments in the Rio Tinto (Spain), glacier samples (Austria) and permafrost samples (Russia and Canada). Samples were collected under strict anoxic conditions to be used for cultivation and genomic community analysis. Using the samples, a culturing approach was implemented to enrich anaerobic organisms using a defined medium that would allow for organisms to be grown under identical conditions in future physiological comparisons. Anaerobic microorganisms were isolated and deposited with the DSMZ (Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen GmbH) culture collection to make them available to other scientists. In MASE, the selected organisms are studied with respect to survival and growth under Mars relevant stresses. They are artificially fossilized and the resulting biosignatures studied and used to investigate the efficacy of life detection instrumentation for planetary missions. Some of the organisms belong to genera with medical and environmental importance such as Yersinia spp., illustrating how astrobiology field ...
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Cockell, C. S., Schwendner, P. und Perras, A. (2018) Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection. International Journal of Astrobiology 17, S. 314-328.
doi:10.5283/epub.41071
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spelling ftunivregepub:oai:epub.uni-regensburg.de:41071 2025-04-27T14:29:23+00:00 Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection Cockell, C. S. Schwendner, P. Perras, A. 2018 application/pdf https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/41071/ https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/international-journal-of-astrobiology/article/anaerobic-microorganisms-in-astrobiological-analogue-environments-from-field-site-to-culture-collection/2C40A666C4D4F2BFEA64C08C57357B5E https://doi.org/10.5283/epub.41071 en eng Cambridge University Press https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/41071/1/anaerobic_microorganisms_in_astrobiological_analogue_environments_from_field_site_to_culture_collection.pdf Cockell, C. S., Schwendner, P. und Perras, A. (2018) Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection. International Journal of Astrobiology 17, S. 314-328. doi:10.5283/epub.41071 https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/licenses/lic_without_pod.html 570 Biowissenschaften Biologie ddc:570 info:eu-repo/semantics/article Artikel doc-type:Article NonPeerReviewed 2018 ftunivregepub https://doi.org/10.5283/epub.41071 2025-04-02T04:17:28Z Astrobiology seeks to understand the limits of life and to determine the physiology of organisms in order to better assess the habitability of other worlds. To successfully achieve these goals we require microorganisms from environments on Earth that approximate to extraterrestrial environments in terms of physical and/or chemical conditions. The most challenging of these environments with respect to sample collection, isolation and cultivation of microorganisms are anoxic environments. In this paper, an approach to this challenge was implemented within the European Union's MASE (Mars Analogues for Space Exploration) project. In this review paper, we aim to provide a set of methods for future field work and sampling campaigns. A number of anoxic environment based on characteristics that make them analogous to past and present locations on Mars were selected. They included anoxic sulphur-rich springs (Germany), the salt-rich Boulby Mine (UK), a lake in a basaltic context (Iceland), acidic sediments in the Rio Tinto (Spain), glacier samples (Austria) and permafrost samples (Russia and Canada). Samples were collected under strict anoxic conditions to be used for cultivation and genomic community analysis. Using the samples, a culturing approach was implemented to enrich anaerobic organisms using a defined medium that would allow for organisms to be grown under identical conditions in future physiological comparisons. Anaerobic microorganisms were isolated and deposited with the DSMZ (Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen GmbH) culture collection to make them available to other scientists. In MASE, the selected organisms are studied with respect to survival and growth under Mars relevant stresses. They are artificially fossilized and the resulting biosignatures studied and used to investigate the efficacy of life detection instrumentation for planetary missions. Some of the organisms belong to genera with medical and environmental importance such as Yersinia spp., illustrating how astrobiology field ... Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier glacier glacier* Iceland permafrost University of Regensburg Publication Server Canada
spellingShingle 570 Biowissenschaften
Biologie
ddc:570
Cockell, C. S.
Schwendner, P.
Perras, A.
Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection
title Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection
title_full Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection
title_fullStr Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection
title_full_unstemmed Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection
title_short Anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection
title_sort anaerobic microorganisms in astrobiological analogue environments: from field site to culture collection
topic 570 Biowissenschaften
Biologie
ddc:570
topic_facet 570 Biowissenschaften
Biologie
ddc:570
url https://epub.uni-regensburg.de/41071/
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/international-journal-of-astrobiology/article/anaerobic-microorganisms-in-astrobiological-analogue-environments-from-field-site-to-culture-collection/2C40A666C4D4F2BFEA64C08C57357B5E
https://doi.org/10.5283/epub.41071