Login / Signup

Dispersion of Bacteria by Low-Pressure Boiling: Life Detection in Enceladus' Plume Material.

L J PereraC S Cockell
Published in: Astrobiology (2023)
The plume of Enceladus is thought to originate from the dispersion of a liquid source beneath the icy crust. Cryovolcanic activity on Enceladus may present a direct way of accessing material originating from the potentially habitable subsurface ocean. One way to test the hypothesis of whether life is present within the ocean of Enceladus would be to investigate the plume material for the presence of microbial life. In this study, we investigated the entrainment of Bacillus subtilis within Enceladus-like fluids under boiling conditions caused by exposure of the fluids to low pressure. We show that boiling, associated with exposure of a fluid to low pressure, works as a mechanism for dispersing bacteria in Enceladus plume-like environments. Exposure of Enceladus-type fluids (0.01-0.1 molal Na 2 CO 3 and 0.05-0.2 molal NaCl) to low pressure (5 mbar) results in the dispersion of bacteria in droplets that evaporate to produce particles of salt. We find that, for particles with radius ( r ) ≤ 10 μm, the number of dispersed particles containing cells was between 7.7% and 10.9%. However, for larger particles 10 <  r  ≤ 50 μm, 64.4% and 56.4% contained cells for lower and upper end-member solutions, respectively. Our results suggest that the gravity-induced size sorting of plume particles will result in plume deposits closer to the vent source containing a larger volume of biological material than within the plume. If life is present in the ocean of Enceladus, we would expect that it would be effectively entrained and deposited on the surface; therefore, it would be accessible with a surface-lander-based instrument.
Keyphrases
  • induced apoptosis
  • bacillus subtilis
  • cell cycle arrest
  • microbial community
  • signaling pathway
  • cell proliferation
  • cell death
  • single molecule
  • endothelial cells
  • patient reported outcomes
  • label free