- Bacterium in a lab thrived despite substituting one of the six building blocks of life.
 - The finding has implications for the search for life beyond Earth -- as well as the prospect that alternative forms of life may exist on the home planet as well.
 - Scientists weaned a strain of bacteriaoff of phosphorus, leaving them to do-or-die with arsenic. Surprisingly, they lived.
 
Strange bacteria living deep in a California lake can survive on  arsenic and can even grow by incorporating the element into its DNA and  cell membranes.
"It has solved the challenge of being alive in a very different way  than we knew of," said lead researcher Felisa Wolfe-Simon, a biochemist  with the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif. 
GFAJ-1 is no Frankenstein monster. It's a bacterium scooped up  from the salty sediments of Mono Lake in California that seems to have  pulled off a major scrambling of its building blocks for life --  something scientists didn't think possible.
The finding not only presents the possibility that alternative life  forms can exist, or once existed, on Earth. It opens the floodgates for  scientists developing techniques to identify alien life, if it exists.  And it raises the prospect of alternative methods for wastewater  treatment and bio-energy production.
"The implications are profound, regardless. The building blocks of  life are more flexible that we had previously thought," astrobiologist  Ariel Anbar, with Arizona State University.
The life forms in question, GFAJ-1 of the Halomonadaceae  family of Gamoproteobacteria -- like all living things -- were dependent  on oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur to exist.  But in the laboratory of Wolfe-Simon, a NASA astrobiology research  fellow, the organisms learned to live with arsenic instead of  phosphorus.
"Are the organisms actually doing this in Mono Lake, or do they have  the latent ability to do so? That's an interesting question to pursue,"  said Anbar, a co-author of the study.
Analysis showed the transition was more than cosmetic. The microbes  seem to have incorporated arsenic into their DNA. Wolfe-Simon  accomplished this by not replenishing the phosphorus in their laboratory  environment, forcing them to make do, or die, in a liquid that became  increasingly more concentrated in arsenic, which from a molecular  perspective, closely resembles phosphorus.
  Surprisingly, the colony lived and grew.
"Nothing should have grown," Wolfe-Simon told reporters. "It was  amazing. We have a microbe doing something different than life as we  know it. We've cracked open the door to what's possible elsewhere in the  universe."
Steven Benner, with the Foundation for Applied Molecular Evolution in  Gainesville, Fla., would like to see more detailed studies on the  chemistry, including radioactive tracers to map the location of arsenic  in cells.
  "Chemists think this is an exceptional result, and therefore chemists  will, like Carl Sagan says, require exceptional evidence to prove it,"  Benner said.
If the study holds up, it could lead to a change in how phosphates are used and managed on Earth.
  "Phosphate-based fertilizers are one of the pillars of the green  revolution," said chemist James Elser, also with Arizona State. "They  are limited in a lot of different ecosystems. Organisms rely on  phosphorus to build nucleic acids and other molecules to grow and  proliferate."
"Phosphorus is a big issue for sustainability and the quality of  aquatic ecosystems. When it leaks out of systems, out of agricultural  systems, it functions as a pollutant," Elser added. "It's really  exciting to think about the possibilities that are raised by a clever  organism that evolved a way to do without phosphorus, possibly... and  how it might be used in wastewater treatment, recovering phosphorus from  various sources, in bio-energy production."
The finding also will spur NASA to rethink how it goes about looking  for life, particularly on Mars, the target for a new rover packed with  biology and chemistry experiments that is due to be launched next year.
  "It makes me have to expand my notion of what environmental  constituents might enable habitability," said Pamela Conrad, a Mars  Science Lab co-investigator with NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in  Greenbelt, Md.
"Perhaps arsenic is not an essential component for habitability or  for life, but it may be one that can be tolerated," she added. "And that  opens up our perspective to try to understand what other potential  components might be tolerated, or in fact even essential, that we  presently haven't thought of."
 by "environment clean generations"


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