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EXTREMOPHILES as Astrobiological Models


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bioreactor and obtain information on the oxidation of metal sulfides in anaerobic conditions were carried out.

      The central objective of the first, the Mars Astrobiology Research and Technology Experiment (MARTE project), a joint effort between the Centro de Astrobiología (CAB, CSIC-INTA) and the NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI), was to gather information about the microbial activity operating in the subsurface of the IPB. Peña de Hierro (Iron Mountain, a recurrent name associated with mining operations), on the north flank of Rio Tinto anticline, was selected for drilling. Complex massive sulfide lenses or stockwork veins of pyrite and quartz generated by hydrothermal activity can be found at the upper part of the IPB volcanic sequence [2.69]. Faults intersect the Early Carboniferous volcanic tuff-hosted pyrite bodies.

      Water from upslope springs was used to characterize the groundwater before contacting the ore body. The water from these springs had a neutral pH, a low ionic content and was saturated with O2. The environmental conditions within the ore body were obtained from the analysis of the core samples of two drilling boreholes, BH4 and BH8, at a depth of 165 mbs, separated by a distance of 10 m. The water table was detected at 90 mbs in both boreholes.

Photo depicts the process of the selected cores for the generation of samples in an anaerobic chamber in the Museo Minero laboratory.

      Twice a year the MLDS were analyzed to follow the evolution of fluid formation in the boreholes. Similar patterns were observed for both boreholes. The average pH was ca. 3.5 and remained acidic for two years after drilling. Sulfate concentrations were lower than in rock leachates. The dissolved, oxidized and reduced iron ratios were variable along the length of the borehole, underlying the functional activity of the iron cycle. The highest concentration of dissolved H2 was found in the upper part of the water table and dissolved methane was detected in many samples, indicating methanogenic activity in the subsurface of the IPB [2.40] [2.9].

      Core samples from both boreholes were examined with an antibody microarray (LDCHIP200) [2.85] and an oligonucleotide hybridization microarray [2.50], giving positive signals for sulfur and iron oxidizers, methanogenic archaea, sulfate reducers and Gram-positive bacteria. Denitrifying and hydrogenotrophic bacteria were identified by 16S rRNA cloning and sequencing. Enrichment cultures showed the presence of aerobic pyrite and iron oxidizers, anaerobic respiration of thiosulfate using nitrate, sulfate reducers and methanogens at different depths [2.87] [2.11].

      The environment down-gradient from the metal sulfide ore body was sampled by drilling borehole BH1. Compared to BH4 and BH8 boreholes, BH1 showed lower iron and sulfate concentrations in the leachates while sulfate concentrations in the MLDS were much higher, indicating that the groundwater had a strong interaction with the ore. Dissolved hydrogen had lower concentrations and dissolved methane had higher concentration in BH1 than in BH4 and BH8. Enrichment cultures with samples from this borehole showed mainly methanogenic and sulfate-reducing activities [2.40] [2.9].

      Drilling was performed in similar conditions to those described previously for the MARTE project. Rock leachates obtained from samples at regular intervals were analyzed overnight by ion chromatography to determine the concentration of water-soluble anions, facilitating the selection of cores for further analysis using complementary methodologies. Chromatograms showed the presence of oxidized inorganic in ions, such as nitrate and sulfate, as well as reduced organic acids such as acetate. Proteins and sugars were also detected in different samples, demonstrating the existence of microorganisms at different depths.

      Cores were logged at the drilling site and samples from selected cores were taken for further petrographic, mineralogical (XRD), elemental (ICP-MS) and stable isotopic analysis. Pyrite and its alteration products, hematite and magnetite, were identified mineralogically in samples from both boreholes. Iron and other metals were identified in leachates from these samples.

      Gas chromatography of core samples from both boreholes detected H2, CO2 and CH4. Samples from the BH10 borehole were analyzed with the immunosensor LDChip300, a new generation of antibody microarray containing three hundred antibodies with diverse and complementary specificity. Positive immunological reactions were detected using specific antibodies against sulfate-reducing bacteria and methanogenic archaea, which agree with the results obtained using other techniques.