Comparative Survival Analysis of Deinococcus Radiodurans and the Haloarchaea Natrialba Magadii and Haloferax Volcanii, Exposed to Vacuum Ultraviolet Irradiation
Ximena C. Abrevaya, Ivan G. Paulino-Lima, Douglas Galante, Fabio, Rodrigues, Pablo J.D. Mauas, Eduardo Corton, and Claudia de Alencar Santos, Lage

TL;DR
This study compares the survival of Deinococcus radiodurans and haloarchaea Natrialba magadii and Haloferax volcanii under vacuum-UV radiation, revealing N. magadii's remarkable resistance and implications for extraterrestrial life.
Contribution
First report of haloarchaea survival under simulated interplanetary vacuum-UV conditions, highlighting their potential resilience in extraterrestrial salty environments.
Findings
N. magadii shows higher resistance than D. radiodurans at high vacuum-UV.
H. volcanii has significantly lower survival rates under UV exposure.
D. radiodurans maintains 1% survival at high fluencies, N. magadii below 0.1%.
Abstract
The haloarchaea Natrialba magadii and Haloferax volcanii, as well as the radiation-resistant bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans, were exposed to vacuum-UV (V-UV) radiation at the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory (LNLS). Cell monolayers (containing 105 - 106 cells per sample) were prepared over polycarbonate filters and irradiated under high vacuum (10-5 Pa) with polychromatic synchrotron radiation. N. magadii was remarkably resistant to high vacuum with a survival fraction of ((3.77 \pm 0.76) x 10-2), larger than the one of D. radiodurans ((1.13 \pm 0.23) x 10-2). The survival fraction of the haloarchaea H. volcanii, of ((3.60 \pm 1.80) x 10-4), was much smaller. Radiation resistance profiles were similar between the haloarchaea and D. radiodurans for fluencies up to 150 J m-2. For fluencies larger than 150 J m-2 there was a significant decrease in the survival of haloarchaea, and…
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