论文标题
原始光嗜血率的光谱法作为全球表面生物签名
Spectropolarimetry of primitive phototrophs as global surface biosignatures
论文作者
论文摘要
光合作用是一个古老的代谢过程,始于地球早期,为利用它的生物提供了充足的能量,以至于它们可以实现全球意义。具有类似过程的潜力,可以在可居住的系外行星上运作并导致可观察到的生物签名。在氧光合物的出现之前,最原始的光子,无氧光养护物,地球上主导的表面环境。在这里,我们表征了表面极化生物签名与多种氧合光养育和蓝细菌样本相关的,从而检查了自然环境中的纯培养物和微生物群落。偏振法是一种可用于测量生物分子的手性特征的工具。手性被认为是一种普遍的,不可知的生物签名,独立于行星的生物化学,获得了极大的兴趣作为生命检测任务的目标生物符号。与早期工作的初步指示相反,我们表明,与手性光合色素和氧合和氧光子的多种光合作用色素和色素复合物有关,包括极化的幅度多种多样,包括极化的大小。我们还表明,从其中一种光养育中的颜料明显死亡和释放颜料伴随着反射率偏振信号的升高,这对于可检测到的可检测到的环境特征可能很重要。这项工作和其他工作表明,圆极化信号可能会发生〜1%,比以前预期的圆极化水平要强大。我们得出的结论是,全球表面极化生物签名可能是由氧合和氧光嗜蛋力引起的,这些光嗜蛋力占据了我们岩石,居住的行星历史的近80%。
Photosynthesis is an ancient metabolic process that began on the early Earth, offering plentiful energy to organisms that utilize it, to the extent that they can achieve global significance. The potential exists for similar processes to operate on habitable exoplanets and result in observable biosignatures. Prior to the advent of oxygenic photosynthesis, the most primitive phototrophs, anoxygenic phototrophs, dominated surface environments on the planet. Here, we characterize surface polarization biosignatures associated with a diverse sample of anoxygenic phototrophs and cyanobacteria, examining both pure cultures and microbial communities from the natural environment. Polarimetry is a tool that can be used to measure the chiral signature of biomolecules. Chirality is considered a universal, agnostic biosignature that is independent of a planet's biochemistry, receiving considerable interest as a target biosignature for life detection missions. In contrast to preliminary indications from earlier work, we show that there is a diversity of distinctive circular polarization signatures, including the magnitude of the polarization, associated with the variety of chiral photosynthetic pigments and pigment complexes of anoxygenic and oxygenic phototrophs. We also show that the apparent death and release of pigments from one of the phototrophs is accompanied by an elevation of the reflectance polarization signal by an order of magnitude, which may be significant for remotely detectable environmental signatures. This work and others suggest circular polarization signals up to ~1% may occur, significantly stronger than previously anticipated circular polarization levels. We conclude that global surface polarization biosignatures may arise from anoxygenic and oxygenic phototrophs, which have dominated nearly 80% of the history of our rocky, inhabited planet.