Los Angeles Times

Can life exist on Saturn moon?

Study finds a life form on Earth that may do fine on icy Enceladus.

- DEBORAH NETBURN deborah.netburn@latimes.com Twitter: @DeborahNet­burn

Researcher­s have found at least one life form on Earth that might do fine on icy Enceladus.

With its subsurface ocean and geysers spewing water and complex organic molecules, Saturn’s moon Enceladus is one of the most promising places to look for extraterre­strial life in the solar system, scientists say.

But what exactly would life on Enceladus look like, and how would it function?

After all, the theoretica­l organisms growing and multiplyin­g deep below the ice moon’s surface would have no access to the sunlight that fuels the vast majority of life on Earth.

There is no available oxygen to work with, and a tremendous amount of pressure to contend with if an organism hopes to derive energy from the chemical reaction between Enceladus’ subsurface ocean and its rocky core.

Despite these hurdles, a team of researcher­s found that there is at least one life form on Earth that probably would do just fine living under the presumed conditions on Enceladus. It’s a single-celled organism known as Me than other mo co cc usok in aw en sis that lives in hydrotherm­al vents more than 3,000 feet below sea level off the coast of Japan.

In a paper published Tuesday in Nature Communicat­ion, researcher­s show that M. okinawensi­s could theoretica­lly thrive in what scientists believe to be the conditions on Enceladus, by turning molecular hydrogen and carbon dioxide — both believed to be present on the ice moon — into methane.

No spacecraft has penetrated Enceladus’ frozen crust, but NASA’s Cassini spacecraft did fly through great plumes of material that were spewing from the moon’s south pole.

These passes revealed that Enceladus’ internal ocean is made primarily of water, but the spacecraft’s instrument­s also detected methane, carbon dioxide, ammonia, molecular nitrogen and molecular hydrogen, among other compounds.

To see if any life forms on Earth could survive on Enceladus, the authors turned to three types of microbes known as methanogen­ic archaea. These are singlecell­ed organisms that grow in the absence of both sunlight and oxygen, and produce methane as a metabolic product.

Here on Earth you can find methanogen­ic archaea in marine sediments, salt marshes and in the human gut, where they are partly responsibl­e for flatulence and belching.

After attempting to grow archaea in a variety of conditions, the authors decided to work exclusivel­y with M. okinawensi­s because it grew predictabl­y in several scenarios.

Over the next series of experiment­s, they found that M. okinawensi­s was able to reproduce and make methane under the chemical and pressure conditions presumed to be found on Enceladus. In addition, the authors showed that the presence of molecular growth inhibitors, which also are known to be part of Enceladus’ chemical profile, did not hinder M. okinawensi­s’ growth.

“M. okinawensi­s grew under all tested putative [presumed] Enceladus-like conditions,” said Simon Rittmann, an archaea biologist at Vienna University, who led the work. “Even formaldehy­de and ammonium at the highest-tested concentrat­ions and pressure up to 90 bars resulted in methane production.”

The new study shows how life as we know it could survive on Enceladus, but Rittmann cautions that it is still too soon to say whether these microbes would survive.

“Our study is a physiologi­cal, microbiolo­gical, geological study, and the results from lab experiment­s must be very carefully interprete­d,” he said.

 ?? Associated Press ?? NASA’S Cassini spacecraft took this 2005 image of geysers spewing water on Enceladus, a Saturn moon.
Associated Press NASA’S Cassini spacecraft took this 2005 image of geysers spewing water on Enceladus, a Saturn moon.

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