Prehistoric bacteria
revived from buried salt
By J. Travis
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| Spore formed
by an allegedly ancient Bacillus bacterium. (Photo: Rosenzweig and Vreeland) |
Hundreds of millions of years ago, before dinosaurs roamed the planet,
an ocean rippled where the sun now bakes a New Mexico desert. As that
seawater evaporated, its salt crystallized, sometimes trapping pockets
of brine.
Covered by sediments over the years, those salt deposits currently
sit half a mile below the desert floor. Microbiologists who have procured
samples of the salt crystals and carefully tapped into the pockets,
called inclusions, now claim to have isolated and revived bacteria that
were last active 250 million years ago.
If true, the finding may shed light onto issues such as how life on
earth evolved, where signs of lifepast or currenton Mars might be found,
and how long life-forms can survive.
"These organisms could very well be 250 million years old," says Raul
J. Cano of California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo.
Four years ago, Cano's research group reported isolating living bacteria
from the guts of dead insects entrapped in amber for up to 125 million
years (SN: 5/20/95, p. 308).
That work, however, continues to draw skepticism from some scientists,
who dismiss the idea that organisms can survive for eons. The new claims
of ancient bacteria by William D. Rosenzweig and Russell H. Vreeland
will likely provoke similar reactions. The two researchers, from West
Chester (Penn.) University, head a group that for many years has been
developing techniques to isolate bacteria from salt deposits without
risking outside contamination.
Working in air-filtered laboratory facilities used previously for handling
viruses such as HIV but not bacteria, the investigators sterilize the
surfaces of their salt crystals with hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide.
They then carefully drill into pockets within the crystals, withdraw
the brine inside, and try to cultivate bacteria from the liquid. For
the recent experiments, they procured crystals from the ancient salt
deposits within the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, a controversial underground
holding facility for low-grade nuclear waste near Carlsbad, N.M. (SN:
11/1/97, p. 277).
At last week's meeting in Chicago of the American Society for Microbiology
(ASM), the research team reported hitting pay dirt.
From brine in several different salt crystals, the scientists have
grown novel spherical bacteria belonging to the genus of spore-forming
microbes called Bacillus. Laboratory studies have shown that
the bacteria can indeed form spores, which may explain their survival
for hundreds of millions of years.
The researchers have identified an even odder microbe from the site,
although they aren't as confident of its age. They cultivated the rod-shaped
organism directly from dissolved salt crystals rather than from an inclusion.
The molecular contents of the second microbe's membrane suggest that
it belongs among the archaea, the so-called third branch of life (SN:
8/24/96, p. 116). This reddish microorganism needs salt to maintain
its cell membrane. Other salt-dependent archaea, called halobacteria,
reside in such places as the Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lake.
Curiously, the newly isolated microbe derives energy only from molecules
with a small number of carbon atoms, such as glycerol, acetate, and
pyruvate. It has no use for more complex nutrients, such as glucose
or amino acids. "It grows really well, but only on a limited diet,"
says Vreeland.
This simple metabolism, the researchers speculate, may reflect that
of the ancient microorganisms first inhabiting the planet. The scientists
have so far been unable to match the microbe's DNA to that of known
creatures. "It's screaming how old it is," says Rosenzweig.
Yet proving the age of bacteria found in ancient salt deposits is no
easy task. One major concern centers on whether the fluid-filled inclusions
formed when the original salt deposited or later, when heat, vibrations,
or other events caused recrystallization.
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| By drilling a channel (arrow) into pockets of ancient seawater trapped in salt crystals such as this one, scientists found bacteria that may be 250 million years old. (Photo: Rosenzweig and Vreeland) |
"You have to be absolutely certain that the piece of salt . . . is
250 million years old and not just 100,000 years old or 20 years old,"
notes William D. Grant of the University of Leicester in England, who
also examines ancient salt deposits for bacteria. He recommends that
the researchers date the inclusions by analyzing the elements in the
fluid they contain.
Vreeland counters that the New Mexico salt formation is one of the
best-dated and most thoroughly studied and that his team worked with
geologists to develop rigorous criteria for identifying original inclusions.
From 220 kilograms of salt taken from the site, only 20 to 30 crystals,
totaling less than 100 grams, met their requirements, he notes.
No matter how strict the precautions, some scientists dismiss all claims
of ancient bacteria as modern contamination. "People are just going
to laugh if you get Bacillus out of salt because Bacillus
is everywhere," admits Grant.
Indeed, in the 1960s, a researcher named Heinz J. Dombrowski claimed
to have revived Bacillus and other bacteria from salt deposits
more than 500 million years old. Other scientists ridiculed him. "He
was probably right, but he was ahead of his time," Grant now reflects.
Since then, microbiologists may have become more willing to accept
claims of microbes lasting for eons since they have already identified
organisms that thrive despite massive radiation, extremely cold and
hot temperatures, and long periods without water. "A lot of paradigms
about what life can and cannot do are coming apart now," notes Richard
B. Hoover of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
If the salt-derived microbes are hundreds of millions of years old,
comparing their DNA with that of modern organisms should prove illuminating.
"You can actually look at evolution on a molecular basis and do molecular
paleontology. You're not dealing with just bones, but with genes," says
Hoover.
NASA's interest in ancient salt deposits arises because Mars and Jupiter's
moon Europa once had oceans and may have similar salt formations (SN:
11/1/97, p. 284). Missions searching for signs of extraterrestrial life
might therefore target those deposits.
Meanwhile, the debate over ancient bacteria will persist. "There's
going to continue to be healthy skepticism," says Melanie R. Mormile
of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Wash., who
herself described 97,000-year-old salt-derived microbes at the ASM meeting,
Whenever anyone claims they have revived organisms that are millions
of years old, she says, "you've got to sit back and go, 'Wow, that's
incredible. How can that be?' "