Active Microbial Airborne Dispersal and Biomorphs as Confounding Factors for Life Detection in the Cell-Degrading Brines of the Polyextreme Dallol Geothermal Field
Jodie Belilla, Miguel Iniesto, David Moreira, Karim Benzerara, Emmanuelle Gérard, José María López García, Electra Kotopoulou, Purificación López‐García
Abstract
Determining the precise limits of life in polyextreme environments is challenging. Confounding factors such as exogenous contamination and the abiotic formation of structures resembling cells need to be considered before concluding on the unambiguous development of microbial life in low-biomass environments. Here, we explored how these factors can affect contrasting reports about microbial life thriving in the hypersaline and hyperacidic brines of the Dallol geothermal field (Danakil Depression, Ethiopia). We show not only that aerosols actively transport a wide diversity of prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells over Dallol but also that, upon contact with the chaotropic hyperacidic brine, cells and DNA are rapidly degraded. We also show the extant occurrence of mineral (mostly silica-based) biomorphs that unspecifically bind fluorescent probes and dyes. Our study highlights the need for controls and the consideration of alternative abiotic explanations before safely drawing conclusions on the presence of life in polyextreme terrestrial or extraterrestrial systems.