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Effect of shadowing on survival of bacteria under conditions simulating the Martian atmosphere and UV radiationSpacecraft-associated spores and four non-spore-forming bacterial isolates were prepared in Atacama Desert soil suspensions and tested both in solution and in a desiccated state to elucidate the shadowing effect of soil particulates on bacterial survival under simulated Martian atmospheric and UV irradiation conditions. All non-spore-forming cells that were prepared in nutrient-depleted, 0.2-μm-filtered desert soil (DSE) microcosms and desiccated for 75 days on aluminum died, whereas cells prepared similarly in 60-μm-filtered desert soil (DS) microcosms survived such conditions. Among the bacterial cells tested, Microbacterium schleiferi and Arthrobacter sp. exhibited elevated resistance to 254-nm UV irradiation (low-pressure Hg lamp), and their survival indices were comparable to those of DS- and DSE-associated Bacillus pumilus spores. Desiccated DSE-associated spores survived exposure to full Martian UV irradiation (200 to 400 nm) for 5 min and were only slightly affected by Martian atmospheric conditions in the absence of UV irradiation. Although prolonged UV irradiation (5 min to 12 h) killed substantial portions of the spores in DSE microcosms (~5- to 6-log reduction with Martian UV irradiation), dramatic survival of spores was apparent in DS-spore microcosms. The survival of soil-associated wild-type spores under Martian conditions could have repercussions for forward contamination of extraterrestrial environments, especially Mars.
Document ID
20210002144
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Accepted Manuscript (Version with final changes)
External Source(s)
Authors
Venkateswaran, Kasthuri
Ehrenfreund, Pascale
Mancinelli, Rocco
La Duc, Myron T.
Peeters, Zan
Osman, Shariff
Date Acquired
February 1, 2008
Publication Date
February 1, 2008
Publication Information
Publisher: American Society for Microbiology
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Technical Review

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