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Microbially-Enhanced Vanadium Mining and Bioremediation Under Micro- and Mars Gravity on the International Space Station

Authors :
Charles S. Cockell
Rosa Santomartino
Kai Finster
Annemiek C. Waajen
Natasha Nicholson
Claire-Marie Loudon
Lorna J. Eades
Ralf Moeller
Petra Rettberg
Felix M. Fuchs
Rob Van Houdt
Natalie Leys
Ilse Coninx
Jason Hatton
Luca Parmitano
Jutta Krause
Andrea Koehler
Nicol Caplin
Lobke Zuijderduijn
Alessandro Mariani
Stefano Pellari
Fabrizio Carubia
Giacomo Luciani
Michele Balsamo
Valfredo Zolesi
Jon Ochoa
Pia Sen
James A. J. Watt
Jeannine Doswald-Winkler
Magdalena Herová
Bernd Rattenbacher
Jennifer Wadsworth
R. Craig Everroad
René Demets
Source :
Cockell, C S, Santomartino, R, Finster, K, Waajen, A C, Nicholson, N, Loudon, C M, Eades, L J, Moeller, R, Rettberg, P, Fuchs, F M, Van Houdt, R, Leys, N, Coninx, I, Hatton, J, Parmitano, L, Krause, J, Koehler, A, Caplin, N, Zuijderduijn, L, Mariani, A, Pellari, S, Carubia, F, Luciani, G, Balsamo, M, Zolesi, V, Ochoa, J, Sen, P, Watt, J A J, Doswald-Winkler, J, Herová, M, Rattenbacher, B, Wadsworth, J, Everroad, R C & Demets, R 2021, ' Microbially-Enhanced Vanadium Mining and Bioremediation Under Micro-and Mars Gravity on the International Space Station ', Frontiers in Microbiology, vol. 12, 641387 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.641387, Frontiers in Microbiology, Vol 12 (2021), Cockell, C S, Santomartino, R, Finster, K, Waajen, A C, Nicholson, N, Loudon, C, Eades, L J, Moeller, R, Rettberg, P, Fuchs, F M, Van Houdt, R, Leys, N, Coninx, I, Hatton, J, Parmitano, L, Krause, J, Koehler, A, Caplin, N, Zuijderduijn, L, Mariani, A, Pellari, S, Carubia, F, Luciani, G, Balsamo, M, Zolesi, V, Ochoa, J, Sen, P, Watt, J A J, Doswald-winkler, J, Herová, M, Rattenbacher, B, Wadsworth, J, Everroad, R C & Demets, R 2021, ' Microbially-Enhanced Vanadium Mining and Bioremediation Under Micro-and Mars Gravity on the International Space Station ', Frontiers in Microbiology, vol. 12 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.641387, Frontiers in Microbiology
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2021.

Abstract

As humans explore and settle in space, they will need to mine elements to support industries such as manufacturing and construction. In preparation for the establishment of permanent human settlements across the Solar System, we conducted the ESA BioRock experiment on board the International Space Station to investigate whether biological mining could be accomplished under extraterrestrial gravity conditions. We tested the hypothesis that the gravity (g) level influenced the efficacy with which biomining could be achieved from basalt, an abundant material on the Moon and Mars, by quantifying bioleaching by three different microorganisms under microgravity, simulated Mars and Earth gravitational conditions. One element of interest in mining is vanadium (V), which is added to steel to fabricate high strength, corrosion-resistant structural materials for buildings, transportation, tools and other applications. The results showed that Sphingomonas desiccabilis and Bacillus subtilis enhanced the leaching of vanadium under the three gravity conditions compared to sterile controls by 184.92 to 283.22%, respectively. Gravity did not have a significant effect on mean leaching, thus showing the potential for biomining on Solar System objects with diverse gravitational conditions. Our results demonstrate the potential to use microorganisms to conduct elemental mining and other bioindustrial processes in space locations with non-1 × g gravity. These same principles apply to extraterrestrial bioremediation and elemental recycling beyond Earth.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1664302X
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb5edac65abb1309a3f4fe29b445286f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2021.641387