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Advances in Space Research
Volume 33, Issue 8, 2004, Pages 1222-1230
Space Life Sciences: Search for Signatures of Life, and Space Flight Environmental Effects on the Nervous System
 
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doi:10.1016/j.asr.2003.08.033    
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Copyright © 2004 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd.

Use of different methods for discovery of ice-entrapped microorganisms in ancient layers of the Antarctic glacier

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S. S. AbyzovCorresponding Author Contact Information, E-mail The Corresponding Author, a, R. B. HooverE-mail The Corresponding Author, b, 1, S. ImuraE-mail The Corresponding Author, c, 2, I. N. Mitskevicha, T. NaganumaE-mail The Corresponding Author, d, 3, M. N. Poglazovaa and M. V. Ivanova

a Institute of Microbiology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 11731260-letya, Oktyabrya, 7a, Russia

b Space Science Department, SD50, NASA/NSSTC 320 Sparkman Dr., Huntsville, AL 35805, USA

c National Institute of Polar Research, 9-10, Kaga, 1-chome, Itabashi-ku, Tokyo 173-8515, Japan

d Biological Oceanography Laboratory, Hiroshima University, Higashi-hiroshima 739-8528, Japan


Received 11 November 2002; 
Revised 2 June 2003; 
accepted 28 August 2003. 
Available online 29 January 2004.

Abstract

Investigations throughout the thickness of the ice sheet above Lake Vostok show the presence of microorganisms belonging to different well-known taxonomic groups, even in the very ancient horizons near close to floor of the glacier. Different methods were used to search for microorganisms that are rarely found in the deep ancient layers of an ice sheet. Primary investigations tried the usual methods of sowing samples onto different nutrient media, and the result was that only a few microorganisms grew on the media used. Further investigations of the very ancient layers of the ice sheet by radioisotopic, luminescence, and scanning electron microscopy methods at different modifications, revealed the quantity and morphological diversity of the cells of microorganisms that were distributed on the different horizons. Microbiological investigations in the very ancient strata of the Antarctic ice cover, nearest to the bedrock, support the effectiveness of using a combination of different methods to search for signs of life in ancient icy formations, which might play a role in the long-term preservation and transportation of microbial life throughout the Universe.

Author Keywords: Ice-entrapped microorganisms; Lake Vostok; Antarctic glacier; Methods for microorganism discovery; Astrobiology

Article Outline

1. Introduction
2. Materials and methods
2.1. Inoculation into nutrient media
2.2. Phylogenetic analysis
2.3. Methods of direct microscopy
2.4. Radioisotopic technique
3. Results and discussion
4. Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References









Corresponding Author Contact InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +7-095-135-4566; fax: +7-095-135-6530

1 Fax: +1-256-961-7524.

2 Fax: +81-3-3962-5743.

3 Fax: +81-824-22-7059.


Advances in Space Research
Volume 33, Issue 8, 2004, Pages 1222-1230
Space Life Sciences: Search for Signatures of Life, and Space Flight Environmental Effects on the Nervous System
 
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