Affiliation:
1. Department of Biology, University of Central Florida, 4000 Central Florida Blvd., Orlando, Florida 32816
2. Department of Plant Pathology, University of Florida, Bldg. M6-1025, Space Life Sciences Lab, Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Escherichia coli
and
Serratia liquefaciens
, two bacterial spacecraft contaminants known to replicate under low atmospheric pressures of 2.5 kPa, were tested for growth and survival under simulated Mars conditions. Environmental stresses of high salinity, low temperature, and low pressure were screened alone and in combination for effects on bacterial survival and replication, and then cells were tested in Mars analog soils under simulated Mars conditions. Survival and replication of
E. coli
and
S. liquefaciens
cells in liquid medium were evaluated for 7 days under low temperatures (5, 10, 20, or 30°C) with increasing concentrations (0, 5, 10, or 20%) of three salts (MgCl
2
, MgSO
4
, NaCl) reported to be present on the surface of Mars. Moderate to high growth rates were observed for
E. coli
and
S. liquefaciens
at 30 or 20°C and in solutions with 0 or 5% salts. In contrast, cell densities of both species generally did not increase above initial inoculum levels under the highest salt concentrations (10 and 20%) and the four temperatures tested, with the exception that moderately higher cell densities were observed for both species at 10% MgSO
4
maintained at 20 or 30°C. Growth rates of
E. coli
and
S. liquefaciens
in low salt concentrations were robust under all pressures (2.5, 10, or 101.3 kPa), exhibiting a general increase of up to 2.5 orders of magnitude above the initial inoculum levels of the assays. Vegetative
E. coli
cells were maintained in a Mars analog soil for 7 days under simulated Mars conditions that included temperatures between 20 and −50°C for a day/night diurnal period, UVC irradiation (200 to 280 nm) at 3.6 W m
−2
for daytime operations (8 h), pressures held at a constant 0.71 kPa, and a gas composition that included the top five gases found in the martian atmosphere. Cell densities of
E. coli
failed to increase under simulated Mars conditions, and survival was reduced 1 to 2 orders of magnitude by the interactive effects of desiccation, UV irradiation, high salinity, and low pressure (in decreasing order of importance). Results suggest that
E. coli
may be able to survive, but not grow, in surficial soils on Mars.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology