1Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University Hospital/RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
2Biofilm Centre, University of Duisburg-Essen, Essen, Germany.
Astrobiology. 2019 Aug;19(8):979-994. doi: 10.1089/ast.2018.1913. Epub 2019 Mar 29.
Fossilized biofilms represent one of the oldest known confirmations of life on the Earth. The success of microbes in biofilms results from properties that are inherent in the biofilm, including enhanced interaction, protection, and biodiversity. Given the diversity of microbes that live in biofilms in harsh environments on the Earth, it is logical to hypothesize that, if microbes inhabit other bodies in the Universe, there are also biofilms on those bodies. The Biofilm Organisms Surfing Space experiment was conducted as part of the EXPOSE-R2 mission on the International Space Station. The experiment was an international collaboration designed to perform a comparative study regarding the survival of biofilms versus planktonic cells of various microorganisms, exposed to space and Mars-like conditions. The objective was to determine whether there are lifestyle-dependent differences to cope with the unique mixture of stress factors, including desiccation, temperature oscillations, vacuum, or a Mars-like gas atmosphere and pressure in combination with extraterrestrial or Mars-like ultraviolet (UV) radiation residing during the long-term space mission. In this study, the outcome of the flight and mission ground reference analysis of is presented. Cultural tests demonstrated that remained viable in the desiccated state, being able to survive space and Mars-like conditions and tolerating high extraterrestrial UV radiation for more than 2 years. Culturability decreased, but was better preserved, in the biofilm consortium than in planktonic cells. These results are correlated to differences in genomic integrity after exposure, as visualized by random amplified polymorphic DNA-polymerase chain reaction. Interestingly, cultivation-independent viability markers such as membrane integrity, ATP content, and intracellular esterase activity remained nearly unaffected, indicating that subpopulations of the cells had survived in a viable but nonculturable state. These findings support the hypothesis of long-term survival of microorganisms under the harsh environmental conditions in space and on Mars to a higher degree if exposed as biofilm.
化石生物膜是地球上最早确认的生命形式之一。微生物在生物膜中成功生存的原因在于生物膜所具有的固有特性,包括增强的相互作用、保护和生物多样性。鉴于地球上恶劣环境中生物膜中存在的微生物多样性,合理假设如果微生物存在于宇宙中的其他天体上,那么这些天体上也存在生物膜。生物膜生物体在太空冲浪实验是作为国际空间站 EXPOSE-R2 任务的一部分进行的。该实验是一项国际合作,旨在对各种微生物的生物膜与浮游细胞在太空和火星条件下的生存进行对比研究。目的是确定是否存在与生活方式相关的差异,以应对独特的压力因素混合物,包括干燥、温度波动、真空或类似火星的气体大气和压力,以及长期太空任务中存在的外星或类似火星的紫外线 (UV) 辐射。在这项研究中,展示了飞行和任务地面参考分析的结果。文化测试表明,在干燥状态下仍然具有活力,能够在太空和火星条件下生存,并耐受超过 2 年的高外星 UV 辐射。生物膜联合体中的可培养性降低,但保存得更好。这些结果与暴露后基因组完整性的差异相关,如随机扩增多态性 DNA-聚合酶链反应所可视化的那样。有趣的是,培养独立性存活标志物,如膜完整性、ATP 含量和细胞内酯酶活性几乎不受影响,表明细胞的亚群以存活但不可培养的状态幸存下来。这些发现支持了微生物在太空和火星恶劣环境条件下长期生存的假设,如果以生物膜形式暴露,微生物的生存能力更强。