NASA Researchers Discover Ancient Microbes in Antarctic Lake

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Nov. 30, 2012

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington               
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

Karen Jenvey / Rachel Hoover 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-4789 
karen.jenvey@xxxxxxxx / rachel.hoover@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 12-408

NASA RESEARCHERS DISCOVER ANCIENT MICROBES IN ANTARCTIC LAKE

WASHINGTON -- In one of the most remote lakes of Antarctica, nearly 65 
feet beneath the icy surface, scientists from NASA, the Desert 
Research Institute (DRI) in Reno, Nev., the University of Illinois at 
Chicago, and nine other institutions, have uncovered a community of 
bacteria. This discovery of life existing in one of Earth's darkest, 
saltiest and coldest habitats is significant because it helps 
increase our limited knowledge of how life can sustain itself in 
these extreme environments on our own planet and beyond. 

Lake Vida, the largest of several unique lakes found in the McMurdo 
Dry Valleys, contains no oxygen, is mostly frozen and possesses the 
highest nitrous oxide levels of any natural water body on Earth. A 
briny liquid, which is approximately six times saltier than seawater, 
percolates throughout the icy environment where the average 
temperature is minus 8 degrees Fahrenheit. The international team of 
scientists published their findings online Nov. 26, in the 
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edition. 

"This study provides a window into one of the most unique ecosystems 
on Earth," said Alison Murray, a molecular microbial ecologist and 
polar researcher at the DRI and the report's lead author. "Our 
knowledge of geochemical and microbial processes in lightless icy 
environments, especially at subzero temperatures, has been mostly 
unknown up until now. This work expands our understanding of the 
types of life that can survive in these isolated, cryoecosystems and 
how different strategies may be used to exist in such challenging 
environments." 

Despite the very cold, dark and isolated nature of the habitat, the 
report finds the brine harbors a surprisingly diverse and abundant 
variety of bacteria that survive without a current source of energy 
from the sun. Previous studies of Lake Vida dating back to 1996 
indicate the brine and its inhabitants have been isolated from 
outside influences for more than 3,000 years. 

"This system is probably the best analog we have for possible 
ecosystems in the subsurface waters of Saturn's moon Enceladus and 
Jupiter's moon Europa," said Chris McKay, a senior scientist and 
co-author of the paper at NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, 
Calif. 

Murray and her co-authors and collaborators, including Peter Doran, 
the project's principal investigator at the University of Illinois at 
Chicago, developed stringent protocols and specialized equipment for 
their 2005 and 2010 field campaigns to sample from the lake brine 
while avoiding contaminating the pristine ecosystem. 

"The microbial ecosystem discovered at Lake Vida expands our knowledge 
of environmental limits for life and helps define new niches of 
habitability," said Adrian Ponce, co-author from NASA's Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., who enumerated viable 
bacterial spore populations extracted from Lake Vida. 

To sample unique environments such as this, researchers must work 
under secure, sterile tents on the lake's surface. The tents kept the 
site and equipment clean as researchers drilled ice cores, collected 
samples of the salty brine residing in the lake ice and assessed the 
chemical qualities of the water and its potential for harboring and 
sustaining life. 

Geochemical analyses suggest chemical reactions between the brine and 
the underlying iron-rich sediments generate nitrous oxide and 
molecular hydrogen. The latter, in part, may provide the energy 
needed to support the brine's diverse microbial life. 

Additional research is under way to analyze the abiotic, chemical 
interactions between the Lake Vida brine and its sediment, in 
addition to investigating the microbial community by using different 
genome sequencing approaches. The results could help explain the 
potential for life in other salty, cryogenic environments beyond 
Earth, such as purported subsurface aquifers on Mars. 

This study was partially funded by the NASA Astrobiology Program in 
collaboration with the University of Illinois at Chicago and the 
Desert Research Institute, a nonprofit research campus of the Nevada 
System of Higher Education. 

For more information about DRI, visit: 

http://news.dri.edu/ 

For more information about the NASA Astrobiology Program, visit: 

http://astrobiology.nasa.gov 

	
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