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A Fly-Through Mission Strategy Targeting Peptide as a Signature of Chemical Evolution and Possible Life in Enceladus PlumesIn situ detection of organic molecules in the extraterrestrial environment provides a key step towards better understanding the variety and the distribution of building blocks of life and it may ultimately lead to finding extraterrestrial life within the Solar System. Here we present combined results of two separate experiments that enable us to realize such in situ life signature detection from the deep habitats of the "Ocean World": a hydrothermal reactor experiment simulating complex organic synthesis and a simulated fly-through capture experiment of organic-bearing microparticles using silica aerogels, followed by subsequent analysis. Both experiments employ peptide as a plausible organics existing in Encleadus plume particles produced in its subsurface ocean. Recent laboratory hydrothermal experiments and a theoretical model on silica saturation indicated an on going hydrothermal reactions in subsurface Enceladus ocean. Given the porous chondritic origin of the core, it is likely that organic compounds originated by radiation chemistry such as amino acid precursors could have been provided, leached, and altered through widespread water-rock interactions. By using the same laboratory experimental setup from the latest water-rock interaction study, we performed amino acid polymerization experiments for 144 days and monitored the organic complexity changing over time. So far over 3,000 peaks up to the size of greater than 600 MW were observed through the analysis of capillary electrophoresis time-of-flight mass spectrometry (CE-TOF-MS) with an indication of amino acid derivatives and short peptides. Generally abiotic polymerization of enantiomeric amino acids results in forming stereoisomeric peptides with identical molecular weight and formula as opposed to homochiral biopolymers. Assuming Enceladus plume particles may contain a mixture of stereoisomeric peptides, we were able to distinguish 16 of the 17 stereoisomeric tripeptides as a test sample using capillary electrophoresis (CE) under optimized conditions. We further conducted Enceladus plume fly-through capture experiment by accelerating peptides soaked in rock particles up to a speed of 5.7 km/s and capturing with originally developed hydrophobic silica aerogels. Direct peptide extraction with acetonitrile-water followed by CE analysis led to detection of only but two stereoisomeric acidic peptide peaks, presenting the first run-through hypervelocuty impact sample analysis targeting peptides as key molecule to to understand the ongoing astrobiology on Enceladus.
Document ID
20160010057
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Fujishima, Kosuke
(Tokyo Inst. of Tech. Tokyo, Japan)
Dziomba, Szymon
(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Thiais, France)
Takahagi, Wataru
(Keio Univ. Tokyo, Japan)
Shibuya, Takazo
(Japan Marine Science and Technology Center Yokosuka, Japan)
Takano, Yoshinori
(Japan Marine Science and Technology Center Yokosuka, Japan)
Guerrouache, Mohamed
(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Thiais, France)
Carbonnier, Benjamin
(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique Thiais, France)
Takai, Ken
(Japan Marine Science and Technology Center Yokosuka, Japan)
Rothschild, Lynn J.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Yano, Hajime
(Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency Sagamihara, Japan)
Date Acquired
August 5, 2016
Publication Date
July 26, 2016
Subject Category
Exobiology
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN34356
Meeting Information
Meeting: Enceladus and the Icy Moons of Saturn
Location: Boulder, CO
Country: United States
Start Date: July 26, 2016
End Date: July 29, 2016
Sponsors: Universities Space Research Association
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
organic molecules
extraterrestrial life
Enceladus plumes
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