Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Martian soil is thought to be enriched with strong oxidants such as peroxides and/or iron in high oxidation states that might destroy biological materials. There is also a high flux of ultraviolet radiation at the surface of Mars. Th...

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Main Authors: Paszczynski Andrzej, Crawford Ronald L, Allenbach Lisa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2003-03-01
Series:BMC Microbiology
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2180/3/4
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spelling doaj-003113c94196474da21d80ef206db3ee2020-11-25T02:30:07ZengBMCBMC Microbiology1471-21802003-03-0131410.1186/1471-2180-3-4Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soilPaszczynski AndrzejCrawford Ronald LAllenbach Lisa<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Martian soil is thought to be enriched with strong oxidants such as peroxides and/or iron in high oxidation states that might destroy biological materials. There is also a high flux of ultraviolet radiation at the surface of Mars. Thus, Mars may be inhospitable to life as we know it on Earth. We examined the hypothesis that if the soil of Mars contains ferrates [Fe(VI)], the strongest of the proposed oxidizing species, and also is exposed to high fluxes of UV radiation, it will be self-sterilizing.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Under ambient conditions (25°C, oxygen and water present) K<sub>2</sub>FeO<sub>4 </sub>mixed into sand mineralized some reactive organic molecules to CO<sub>2</sub>, while less reactive compounds were not degraded. Dried endospores of <it>Bacillus subtilis </it>incubated in a Mars surrogate soil comprised of dry silica sand containing 20% by weight K<sub>2</sub>FeO<sub>4 </sub>and under conditions similar to those now on Mars (extreme desiccation, cold, and a CO<sub>2</sub>-dominated atmosphere) were resistant to killing by the ferrate-enriched sand. Similar results were observed with permanganate. Spores in oxidant-enriched sand exposed to high fluxes of UV light were protected from the sporocidal activity of the radiation below about 5 mm depths.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Based on our data and previously published descriptions of ancient but dormant life forms on Earth, we suggest that if entities resembling bacterial endospores were produced at some point by life forms on Mars, they might still be present and viable, given appropriate germination conditions. Endospores delivered to Mars on spacecraft would possibly survive and potentially compromise life detection experiments.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2180/3/4
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paszczynski Andrzej
Crawford Ronald L
Allenbach Lisa
spellingShingle Paszczynski Andrzej
Crawford Ronald L
Allenbach Lisa
Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil
BMC Microbiology
author_facet Paszczynski Andrzej
Crawford Ronald L
Allenbach Lisa
author_sort Paszczynski Andrzej
title Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil
title_short Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil
title_full Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil
title_fullStr Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil
title_full_unstemmed Potassium ferrate [Fe(VI)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil
title_sort potassium ferrate [fe(vi)] does not mediate self-sterilization of a surrogate mars soil
publisher BMC
series BMC Microbiology
issn 1471-2180
publishDate 2003-03-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Martian soil is thought to be enriched with strong oxidants such as peroxides and/or iron in high oxidation states that might destroy biological materials. There is also a high flux of ultraviolet radiation at the surface of Mars. Thus, Mars may be inhospitable to life as we know it on Earth. We examined the hypothesis that if the soil of Mars contains ferrates [Fe(VI)], the strongest of the proposed oxidizing species, and also is exposed to high fluxes of UV radiation, it will be self-sterilizing.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Under ambient conditions (25°C, oxygen and water present) K<sub>2</sub>FeO<sub>4 </sub>mixed into sand mineralized some reactive organic molecules to CO<sub>2</sub>, while less reactive compounds were not degraded. Dried endospores of <it>Bacillus subtilis </it>incubated in a Mars surrogate soil comprised of dry silica sand containing 20% by weight K<sub>2</sub>FeO<sub>4 </sub>and under conditions similar to those now on Mars (extreme desiccation, cold, and a CO<sub>2</sub>-dominated atmosphere) were resistant to killing by the ferrate-enriched sand. Similar results were observed with permanganate. Spores in oxidant-enriched sand exposed to high fluxes of UV light were protected from the sporocidal activity of the radiation below about 5 mm depths.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Based on our data and previously published descriptions of ancient but dormant life forms on Earth, we suggest that if entities resembling bacterial endospores were produced at some point by life forms on Mars, they might still be present and viable, given appropriate germination conditions. Endospores delivered to Mars on spacecraft would possibly survive and potentially compromise life detection experiments.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2180/3/4
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AT allenbachlisa potassiumferratefevidoesnotmediateselfsterilizationofasurrogatemarssoil
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