Most microbial researchers grow their cells in petri-dishes to study how they respond to stress and damaging conditions. But, with the support of funding from NASA, researchers in LSU's Department of Biological Sciences tried something almost unheard of: studying microbial survival in ice to understand how microorganisms could survive in ancient
permafrost(永久冻土), or perhaps even buried in ice on Mars. Brent Christner, associate professor of biological sciences, and colleagues at LSU including postdoctoral researcher Markus Dieser and Mary Lou Applewhite Professor John Battista, recently had results on
DNA1 repair in ice-entrapped microbes accepted in the journal of
Applied2 and Environmental Microbiology. To understand how microbes survive in frozen conditions, Christner and colleagues focused on analysis of DNA, the
hereditary3(遗传的) molecule4 that encodes the
genetic5 instructions used in the development and function of all organisms.
"Microbes are made up of macromolecules that, even if frozen, are subject to decay," Christner said. "We know of a range of spontaneous reactions that result in damage to DNA."
The worst kind of damage is known as a double-stranded break, where the microbe's DNA is
cleaved6 into two separate pieces that need to be put back together to make the
chromosome7 functional8.
"This kind of damage is
inevitable9 if cells exist frozen in permafrost for thousands of years and cannot make repairs," Christner said. "Imagine that a microbe is in ice for extended periods of time and its DNA is progressively getting cut into pieces. There will eventually be a point when the microbe's DNA becomes so damaged that it's no longer a
viable10 informational storage molecule. What is left is a
corpse11."
The situation would seem
dire12 for the
longevity13 of microbes in ice. But
curiously14, researchers have been able to revive microbes buried in ice and permafrost for hundreds of thousands to millions of years. In fact, Christner managed to revive several different types of bacteria from near the bottom of the Guliya ice cap on the Qinghan-Tibetan plateau in Western China -- ice that is 750,000 years old, from long before the age of humans.
But how is it possible for microbes to counter expectations and survive for such long periods when frozen? The survival of microorganisms in ancient glacial ice and permafrost has typically been ascribed to their ability to persist in a
dormant15,
metabolically16 inert17 state. But even this explanation does not account for the background levels of ionizing radiation that cause damage to these microbes' DNA, frozen at the bottom of a
glacier18 or not.
"In order to survive that long, different studies for instance point towards
dormancy19, or 'slow motion metabolism,' but regardless of the
physiological20 state, without active DNA repair an organism will accumulate DNA damage to an extent that will lead to cell death," Dieser said.