X-Message-Number: 25752
From: "Basie" <>
Subject: might hold the key to long-term, cryogenic 
Date: Fri, 4 Mar 2005 00:50:25 -0500

NASA Astrobiologist Identifies New 'Extreme' Life Form
The end of a scientific journey -- started five years ago in a frozen tunnel 
deep below the Alaska tundra -- came in January for NASA astrobiologist Dr. 
Richard Hoover.



NASA astrobiologist Dr. Richard Hoover takes ice samples from the permafrost 
deep inside the U.S. Army's Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory 
near Fox, Alaska. The samples, dating back some 32,000 years, contained 
living organisms -- a previously unrecorded "extremophile" bacterial species 
identified by Hoover and his colleagues. Their findings were published in 
January 2005. NASA studies extremophiles -- organisms that live and thrive 
in conditions inhospitable to most life on Earth -- to gain insight into the 
possibilities for life across the cosmos. (Photo: NASA/Richard Hoover)

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It proved a long, arduous journey for Hoover and his colleagues to complete 
the process of identifying a unique new life form. For the life form itself, 
a new bacterium dubbed Carnobacterium pleistocenium, the journey to 
discovery took much longer -- some 32,000 years.

The bacterium -- the first fully described, validated species ever found 
alive in ancient ice -- is NASA's latest discovery of an "extremophile." 
Extremophiles are hardy life forms that exist and flourish in conditions 
hostile to most known organisms, from the potentially toxic chemical levels 
of salt-choked lakes and alkaline deserts to the extreme heat of deep-sea 
volcanoes. NASA and its partner organizations study the potential for life 
in such extreme zones to help prepare robotic probes and, eventually, human 
explorers to search other worlds for signs of life.

This search is a key element of the Vision for Space Exploration, the 
ambitious effort to return Americans to the Moon and to conduct robotic and 
human exploration of Mars and other worlds in our Solar System, which might 
conceal life forms unimaginable to us -- thriving in conditions few Earth 
species could tolerate.

In 1999 and 2000, Hoover, a researcher at NASA's Marshall Space Flight 
Center in Huntsville, Ala., time-traveled back to the Pleistocene via the 
U.S. Army's Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory, or "CRREL 
tunnel." The research site near Fox, Alaska, just north of Fairbanks, was 
carved by the Army Corps of Engineers in the mid-1960s to enable geologists 
and other scientists to study permafrost -- the mix of permanently frozen 
ice, soil and rock -- in preparation for construction in the early 1970s of 
the Trans-Alaska Oil Pipeline.

Hoover initially went to the CRREL tunnel in search of "psychrophiles" --  
organisms that live only at extremely low temperatures. Hoover initially 
suspected the samples he collected there, from ice more than 30 millennia 
old, were diatoms, or microscopic, golden-brown algae. But closer study at 
the nearby University of Alaska revealed not diatoms but something much more 
interesting -- an assortment of bacterial cells, many of which came to life 
as soon as the ice thawed.

Hoover and his collaborator, microbiologist Dr. Elena Pikuta of the 
University of Alabama in Huntsville, studied the samples at the National 
Space Science and Technology Center, the research consortium operated by 
NASA and Alabama universities. They found the samples contained anaerobic 
bacteria that grew on sugars and proteins in total absence of oxygen. The 
bacteria had frozen near the end of the Pleistocene Age, which extended from 
about 1.8 million years ago to just 11,000 years ago -- and earned the new 
organism its name.

Further testing revealed the organism was not a psychrophile at all, but a 
"psychrotolerant" -- not an organism that thrives only at very cold 
temperatures, but one capable of enduring deep cold that resumes normal 
activity when temperatures rise.

Hoover, Pikuta and their collaborators -- Damien Marsic of the University of 
Alabama in Huntsville, Professor Asim Bej of the University of Alabama at 
Birmingham and Dr. Jane Tang and Dr. Paul Krader of the American Type 
Culture Collection in Manassas, Va. -- published their discovery in the 
January issue of the International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary 
Microbiology. The bimonthly periodical, the official journal of record for 
new bacterial species, is produced by the Society for General Microbiology.

"Astrobiologists ask, 'Is life strictly terrestrial in origin, or is it a 
cosmic imperative, an undeniable, universal biological truth?' That 
possibility is central to our desire to explore the universe," Hoover said. 
"The existence of microorganisms in these harsh environments suggests -- but 
does not promise -- that we might one day discover similar life forms in the 
glaciers or permafrost of Mars or in the ice crust and oceans of Jupiter's 
moon Europa."

Although many people think of bacteria merely as a cause of illness or 
decay, Hoover and Pikuta are quick to defend the organisms, which they call 
highly advanced marvels of natural engineering. There are approximately 
7,000 validly described species of bacteria, though far more are surmised to 
exist. The vast majority are harmless to humans. Only a very few -- less 
than 1 percent of all known species -- are dangerous. And many, Hoover 
noted, are valuable to human life, aiding us in numerous ways: culturing 
wine, dairy products and other foods; assisting in the biological extraction 
of gold and other precious metals from ore wastes; and aiding production of 
valuable proteins and life-saving drugs.

Carnobacterium pleistocenium could even offer new medical breakthroughs. 
"The enzymes and proteins it possesses, which give it the ability to spring 
to life after such long periods of dormancy, might hold the key to 
long-term, cryogenic -- or very low temperature -- storage of living cells, 
tissues and perhaps even complex life forms," Hoover said.

"Life is far more diverse, and far more resistant to conditions we consider 
hostile, than was thought possible only a decade or two ago," he adds. 
"Studying these organisms helps us understand that life may be far more 
widespread in the cosmos than we previously imagined."

Living cultures of the new bacterium have been deposited in the American 
Type Culture Collection, in the Microbial Collection at the Pasteur 
Institute in Paris, and in the Japan Collection of Microorganisms in 
Saitama, Japan.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/02/050224093714.htm 

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