| Secrets of
a Salty Survivor A microbe that grows in the Dead Sea is teaching scientists about the art of DNA repair. |
September 10, 2004: You can learn a lot from a microbe. Right now, a tiny critter from the Dead Sea is teaching scientists new things about biotechnology, cancer, possible life on other worlds. And that's just for starters:
Right: Cells of Halobacterium as seen through a high-powered microscope. The individual cells in this image are about 5 microns long. [More] Halobacterium appears to be a master of the complex art of DNA repair. This mastery is what scientists want to learn from: In recent years, a series of experiments by NASA-funded researchers at the University of Maryland has probed the limits of Halobacterium's powers of self-repair, using cutting-edge genetic techniques to see exactly what molecular tricks the "master" uses to keep its DNA intact.
Being a virtuoso at repairing damaged DNA makes Halobacterium one hardy little microbe: in experiments by the Maryland research group, Halobacterium has survived normally-lethal doses of ultraviolet radiation (UV), extreme dryness, and even the vacuum of space. The Dead Sea is not so dead But why is Halobacterium such a tenacious survivor? What caused it to evolve such dexterous DNA repair mechanisms? And how do those mechanisms work? Jocelyne DiRuggiero, leader of the Maryland research group, has been exploring these questions for the last five years. She believes the answer stems from the fact that Halobacterium naturally lives in some rather inhospitable places: ultra-salty bodies of water such as the Dead Sea. Most sea life would quickly shrivel up and die in the Dead Sea's briny water, which is 5 to 10 times saltier than normal seawater. The extreme saltiness damages an organism's cells, and especially the DNA inside those cells. This happens because DNA molecules are accustomed to being surrounded by a dense swarm of water molecules, and the DNA actually depends on the influence of these water molecules to keep its double-helix structure intact and to avoid damage. But in ultra-salty waters, the dissolved salt crowds out the water molecules. Partially deprived of the contact with water they need, the long strands of DNA suffer damage and even break, causing the cell to malfunction or die.
Left: The Dead Sea is 5+ times saltier than Earth's oceans. As water evaporates, salt is left behind. When the saturation point is reached, the salt forms these pillars. Credit: Purdue University. DiRuggiero and her research group have begun revealing this DNA-repair
machinery in a recent series of experiments funded by NASA's Exploration
Systems Mission Directorate.
Right: A repair enzyme correcting an error in a DNA molecule. The enzyme is on the right in orange and green, and part of the double-helix-shaped DNA is on the left in blue. Image credit: Albert Lau. Some scientists even claim to have found living cells of Halobacterium
encased in salt deposits that are 250 million years old. (see journal
references below) The claim is controversial, but if true, it could
have some profound implications for the hunt for microbial life on
Mars. Evidence from the Mars Exploration Rovers, Spirit and Opportunity,
announced in March suggests that the Martian surface once had pools
of salty water, which slowly evaporated away.
From those microarrays, DiRuggiero's team has learned that when it
comes to DNA repair, Halobacterium is something of a "Renaissance
bug." It dabbles in a bit of everything. Its genome of only 2,400
genes contains several distinct sets of DNA-repair mechanisms. Some
of these sets of tools are like the DNA-repair tools found in plants
and animals, other sets are more like those of bacteria, and still
others are characteristic of a lesser-known group of life called "Archaea"
(the group that Halobacterium belongs to). Halobacterium
has them all. Beyond even that, Halobacterium has a few novel
DNA-repair mechanisms that no one has ever seen before! "Many of the repair proteins in the Archaea are very similar to that
of Eukarya -- [the group of life that includes] you and me -- and
therefore Archaea can be used as a simple model system to study the
more complex processes that occur in eukaryotes," DiRuggiero explains. |
| Credits &
Contacts |
Production Editor: Dr. Tony Phillips |
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The Science and Technology Directorate at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center sponsors the Science@NASA web sites. The mission of Science@NASA is to help the public understand how exciting NASA research is and to help NASA scientists fulfill their outreach responsibilities. |
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| more information |
DiRuggiero's lab -- home page for the group of researchers discussed in this article Journal references: Grant W.D., Gemmell R.T., McGenity T.J. (1998) Halobacteria: the evidence for longevity. Extremophiles 2:279-287 McGenity T.J. et al. (2000) Origins of halophilic
microorganisms in ancient salt deposits. Environmental
Microbiology 2(3), 243-250 Links about Archaea, genomics, and microarrays -- from the DiRuggiero lab Web site |
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