Verseux Cyprien, Heinicke Christiane, Ramalho Tiago P, Determann Jonathan, Duckhorn Malte, Smagin Michael, Avila Marc
Center of Applied Space Technology and Microgravity (ZARM), University of Bremen, Bremen, Germany.
Front Microbiol. 2021 Feb 16;12:611798. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.611798. eCollection 2021.
The leading space agencies aim for crewed missions to Mars in the coming decades. Among the associated challenges is the need to provide astronauts with life-support consumables and, for a Mars exploration program to be sustainable, most of those consumables should be generated on site. Research is being done to achieve this using cyanobacteria: fed from Mars's regolith and atmosphere, they would serve as a basis for biological life-support systems that rely on local materials. Efficiency will largely depend on cyanobacteria's behavior under artificial atmospheres: a compromise is needed between conditions that would be desirable from a purely engineering and logistical standpoint (by being close to conditions found on the Martian surface) and conditions that optimize cyanobacterial productivity. To help identify this compromise, we developed a low-pressure photobioreactor, dubbed Atmos, that can provide tightly regulated atmospheric conditions to nine cultivation chambers. We used it to study the effects of a 96% N, 4% CO gas mixture at a total pressure of 100 hPa on sp. PCC 7938. We showed that those atmospheric conditions (referred to as MDA-1) can support the vigorous autotrophic, diazotrophic growth of cyanobacteria. We found that MDA-1 did not prevent sp. from using an analog of Martian regolith (MGS-1) as a nutrient source. Finally, we demonstrated that cyanobacterial biomass grown under MDA-1 could be used for feeding secondary consumers (here, the heterotrophic bacterium W). Taken as a whole, our results suggest that a mixture of gases extracted from the Martian atmosphere, brought to approximately one tenth of Earth's pressure at sea level, would be suitable for photobioreactor modules of cyanobacterium-based life-support systems. This finding could greatly enhance the viability of such systems on Mars.
未来几十年,各大主要航天机构的目标是开展载人火星任务。相关挑战之一是需要为宇航员提供生命保障消耗品,并且为了使火星探索计划具有可持续性,大部分消耗品应在当地生产。目前正在进行相关研究,利用蓝细菌来实现这一目标:以火星的风化层和大气为养料,它们将成为依赖当地材料的生物生命保障系统的基础。效率在很大程度上取决于蓝细菌在人工大气环境中的行为:在从纯粹工程和后勤角度来看理想的条件(接近火星表面发现的条件)与优化蓝细菌生产力的条件之间需要达成妥协。为了帮助确定这种妥协方案,我们开发了一种名为Atmos的低压光生物反应器,它可以为九个培养室提供严格调控的大气条件。我们用它研究了总压力为100百帕的96%氮气、4%二氧化碳气体混合物对集胞藻属PCC 7938的影响。我们发现这些大气条件(称为MDA - 1)能够支持蓝细菌旺盛的自养、固氮生长。我们还发现MDA - 1并不妨碍集胞藻属利用火星风化层类似物(MGS - 1)作为营养源。最后,我们证明了在MDA - 1条件下生长的蓝细菌生物量可用于喂养二级消费者(这里指异养细菌W)。总体而言,我们的结果表明,从火星大气中提取的气体混合物,在海平面压力下达到地球压力的约十分之一,将适用于基于蓝细菌的生命保障系统的光生物反应器模块。这一发现可能会大大提高此类系统在火星上的可行性。