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Wiley InterScience

FEMS Microbiology Ecology

FEMS Microbiology Ecology

Volume 59 Issue 2, Pages 217 - 231

Special Issue: Microorganisms in cold environments

Published Online: 17 Nov 2006

© 2009 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved



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MINIREVIEW
Microbial life in glacial ice and implications for a cold origin of life
P. Buford Price 1
  1 Physics Department, University of California, Berkeley, USA
  Correspondence: P. Buford Price, LeConte Hall, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. Tel.: +510 642 4982; fax: +510 643 8497; e-mail: bprice@berkeley.edu

 Editor: Max Häggblom

Copyright © 2006 Federation of European Microbiological Societies
KEYWORDS
origin of life • habitats for life in ice • microbial metabolism • methanogens • iron-reducing bacteria • methane on Mars

ABSTRACT

Application of physical and chemical concepts, complemented by studies of prokaryotes in ice cores and permafrost, has led to the present understanding of how microorganisms can metabolize at subfreezing temperatures on Earth and possibly on Mars and other cold planetary bodies. The habitats for life at subfreezing temperatures benefit from two unusual properties of ice. First, almost all ionic impurities are insoluble in the crystal structure of ice, which leads to a network of micron-diameter veins in which microorganisms may utilize ions for metabolism. Second, ice in contact with mineral surfaces develops a nanometre-thick film of unfrozen water that provides a second habitat that may allow microorganisms to extract energy from redox reactions with ions in the water film or ions in the mineral structure. On the early Earth and on icy planets, prebiotic molecules in veins in ice may have polymerized to RNA and polypeptides by virtue of the low water activity and high rate of encounter with each other in nearly one-dimensional trajectories in the veins. Prebiotic molecules may also have utilized grain surfaces to increase the rate of encounter and to exploit other physicochemical features of the surfaces.


Received 2 May 2006; revised 23 July 2006; accepted 16 August 2006.
First published online 17 November 2006.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1574-6941.2006.00234.x About DOI

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