Electrochemical Life Detection Methods for Ocean World Exploration
Ubiquitous across terrestrial life is cellular machinery that allows chemical energy flow by facilitating and regulating electron-transfer and chemical modification pathways. Key classes of energy transport molecules enable this movement of electrons for a variety of biological purposes. Additionally, biological enzymes function to add or remove functional groups such asphosphate moieties to redox biomolecules. Presumably, extraterrestrial life is likely to rely on similar energy transport mechanisms. With the search for life in our solar system focused on the icy satellites of Jupiter and Saturn, Europa and Enceladus, developing instrumentation capable of measuring electrochemical redox signatures representative of biomolecules or enzymatic activity in seawater appears a promising and novel means of life detection. Here, we report our adaptation of the Mars Phoenix Wet Chemistry Laboratory (WCL) electroanalytical voltammetry capabilities to assay life-critical redox molecules in synthetic seawater representative of a saline alkaline solution similar to what has been predicted from the Cassini mission data of Enceladus’ sub-surface ocean. In addition, we employ a well-established electrochemical assay that indicates phosphatase activity by comparing substrate and product redox signatures. Our study demonstrated a 10 nM limit of detection for biological redox molecules and a 3 aM limit of detection for alkaline phosphatase in seawater. Incorporation of these methods into next generation WCL payloads aimed at ocean world life detection will enable the search for biological redox-active species and enzymatic activity as indicators of life.
Related Deep Space Documents
2019 ARIA Proposal Final Report Public Abstract: What Happens to Life in an Ocean World Plume?
The NASA Cassini mission to Saturn discovered persistent jets of water being ejected into space from a subsurface ocean on the small moon Enceladus and evidence that this ocean is habitable for life.
A Hybrid Electrostatic Retarding Potential Analyzer for the Measurement of Plasmas at Extremely High Energy Resolution
Many space plasmas (especially electrons generated in planetary ionospheres) exhibit fine-detailed structures that are challenging to fully resolve with the energy resolution of typical space plasma a
A Low Density Ocean Inside Titan Inferred From Cassini Data
The Cassini mission has provided measurements of the gravity of several moons of Saturn, as well as an estimate of the tidal response, expressed as the degree 2 Love number <i>k<sub>2</sub></i>, of it