Login / Signup

Cryomicrobial Ecology: Still Much To Learn about Life Left Out in the Cold.

Jacqueline Goordial
Published in: mSystems (2021)
Studies from cryoenvironments on Earth have demonstrated that microbial life is widespread and have identified microorganisms that are metabolically active and can replicate at subzero temperatures if liquid water is present. However, cryophiles (subzero-growing organisms) often exist in low densities in the environment and their growth rate is low, making them difficult to study. Compounding this, a large number of dormant and dead cells are preserved in frozen settings. Using integrated genomic and activity-based approaches is essential to understanding the cold limits of life on Earth, as well as how cryophilic microorganisms are poised to adapt and metabolize in warming settings, such as in thawing permafrost. An increased understanding of cryophilic lifestyles on Earth will also help inform how (and where) we look for potential microbial life on cold planetary bodies in our solar system such as Mars, Europa, and Enceladus.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • induced apoptosis
  • gene expression
  • signaling pathway
  • copy number
  • cell cycle arrest
  • gram negative
  • ionic liquid