Paper
28 August 2008 What do membrane lipids tell us about the microorganisms living in extreme environments?
Susan M. Pfiffner, Sarah DiFurio, Ying-Dong Gan, Richard B. Hoover
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
To search for extraterrestrial life surrogate extreme environments on Earth have been chosen for investigation. An example of a surrogate site is the Canadian subpermafrost. Investigations into microbial communities occurred by access fracture borehole water in the Lupin gold mine, and drill rock cores and drilling waters in the High Lake region of Nunavut, Canada. Membrane lipid analyses uses GC/MS and HPLC/ES/MS/MS to provide estimates of biomass, phospholipid (PLFA) and respiratory quinone composition, and compositional changes related to membrane stress caused by nutritional limitations or exposure to toxic conditions. Lupin fracture borehole waters were collected from 800 to 1200 meters, while the High Lake rock cores were collected from 335 to 535 meters. Biomass estimates based on PLFA ranged from 0.25 to 22 pmol L-1 for the Lupin waters. High Lake drill waters had biomass that ranged from below detection limits (bdl) to 595 pmol/ml, while rock core samples had biomass estimates ranging from bdl to 32 pmol g-1. PLFA profiles revealed the presence of both Gram +/- bacteria and sulfatereducing bacteria. Specific PLFA ratios indicate that the bacterial communities were physiologically stressed. Menaquinones were the most abundant but varied in the dominant isoprene units between the two sites. Ubiquinone to menaquinone ratio indicated that these samples have been anoxic for a long time. Methods to detect life signatures at surrogate sites on Earth will be critical for assessing extraterrestrial life. Currently, the membrane lipid analyses provide additional information not easily provided by other molecular techniques.
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Susan M. Pfiffner, Sarah DiFurio, Ying-Dong Gan, and Richard B. Hoover "What do membrane lipids tell us about the microorganisms living in extreme environments?", Proc. SPIE 7097, Instruments, Methods, and Missions for Astrobiology XI, 70970M (28 August 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.795378
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KEYWORDS
Biological research

Mining

Bacteria

Statistical analysis

Microorganisms

Carbon

Ions

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