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Nucleic acid extraction and sequencing from low-biomass synthetic Mars analog soils for in situ life detection

Authors :
Mark A. Brown
Gary Ruvkun
Christopher E. Carr
Angel Mojarro
Julie Hachey
Maria T. Zuber
Ryan Bailey
Robert Doebler
Source :
Astrobiology
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

Recent studies regarding the origins of life and Mars-Earth meteorite transfer simulations suggest that biological informational polymers, such as nucleic acids (DNA and RNA), have the potential to provide unambiguous evidence of life on Mars. To this end, we are developing a metagenomics-based life-detection instrument which integrates nucleic acid extraction and nanopore sequencing: the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Genomes (SETG). Our goal is to isolate and sequence nucleic acids from extant or preserved life on Mars in order to determine if a particular genetic sequence (1) is distantly related to life on Earth, indicating a shared ancestry due to lithological exchange, or (2) is unrelated to life on Earth, suggesting a convergent origins of life on Mars. In this study, we validate prior work on nucleic acid extraction from cells deposited in Mars analog soils down to microbial concentrations (i.e., 104 cells in 50 mg of soil) observed in the driest and coldest regions on Earth. In addition, we report low-input nanopore sequencing results from 2 pg of purified Bacillus subtilis spore DNA simulating ideal extraction yields equivalent to 1 ppb life-detection sensitivity. We achieve this by employing carrier sequencing, a method of sequencing sub-nanogram DNA in the background of a genomic carrier. After filtering of carrier, low-quality, and low-complexity reads we detected 5 B. subtilis reads, 18 contamination reads (including Homo sapiens), and 6 high-quality noise reads believed to be sequencing artifacts.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astrobiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....61de0db3d45146537fb00bbddf4c944f