by Paul Patton
October 2, 2015

from UniverseToday Website
 

 

Paul Patton is a freelance science writer.

He holds a Bachelor's degree in physics from the University of Wisconsin Green Bay, a Master's degree in the history and philosophy of science from Indiana University, and a Doctorate in neuroscience from the University of Chicago.

He has been interested in space, astronomy, and extraterrestrial life since early childhood.

 

 

 

 

The left image shows a mosaic of images taken by the Cassini spacecraft in near infrared light. Titan's polar seas are visible as sunlight glints off of them.

The reflection is in the southern part of Kraken Mare, Titan's largest body of liquid. It consists of liquid methane and other hydrocarbons (compounds of hydrogen and carbon).

The right image is a radar image of Kraken Mare, also obtained by Cassini.

'Kraken' is the name of a legendary Norse sea monster, and the name apparently alludes (at least fancifully) to the hopes of astrobiologists regarding this intriguing alien sea.

Credit: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

 

 

In many ways, Titan is Earth's twin. It's the second largest moon in the solar system and bigger than the planet Mercury.

 

Like Earth, it has a substantial atmosphere, with a surface atmospheric pressure a bit higher than Earth's. Besides Earth, Titan is the only object in our solar system known to have accumulations of liquid on its surface. NASA's Cassini space probe discovered abundant lakes and even rivers in Titan's polar regions.

 

The largest lake, or sea, called Kraken Mare, is larger than Earth's Caspian Sea. Researchers know from both spacecraft observations and laboratory experiments that Titan's atmosphere is rich in complex organic molecules, which are the building blocks of life.

 

All these features might make it seem as though Titan is tantalizingly suitable for life.

 

The name 'Kraken', which refers to a legendary sea monster, fancifully reflects the eager hopes of astrobiologists. But, Titan is Earth's alien twin. Being almost ten times further from the sun than Earth is, its surface temperature is a frigid -180 degrees Celsius.

 

Liquid water is vital to life 'as we know it,' but on Titan's surface all water is frozen solid. Water ice takes on the role that silicon-containing rock does on Earth, making up the outer layers of the crust.

 

The liquid that fills Titan's lakes and rivers is not water, but liquid methane, probably mixed with other substances like liquid ethane, all of which are gases here on Earth. If there is life in Titan's seas, it is not life as we know it. It must be an alien form of life, with organic molecules dissolved in liquid methane instead of liquid water.

 

Is such a thing even possible?

 

The Cornell team took up one key part of this challenging question by investigating whether cell membranes can exist in liquid methane.

 

Every living cell is, essentially, a self-sustaining network of chemical reactions, contained within bounding membranes. Scientists think that cell membranes emerged very early in the history of life on Earth, and their formation might even have been the first step in the origin of life.

 

Here on Earth, cell membranes are as familiar as high school biology class. They are made of large molecules called phospholipids. Each phospholipid molecule has a 'head' and a 'tail'. The head contains a phosphate group, with a phosphorus atom linked to several oxygen atoms.

 

The tail consists of one or more strings of carbon atoms, typically 15 to 20 atoms long, with hydrogen atoms linked on each side. The head, due to the negative charge of its phosphate group, has an unequal distribution of electrical charge, and we say that it is polar.

 

The tail, on the other hand, is electrically neutral.

 

 

Here on Earth, cell membranes are composed of phospholipid molecules dissolved in liquid water. A phospholipid has a backbone of carbon atoms (gray), and also contains hydrogen (sky blue), phosphorus (yellow), oxygen (red), and nitrogen (blue).

Due to the positive charge associated with the nitrogen containing choline group, and the negative charge associated with the phosphate group, the head is polar, and attracts water. It is therefore hydrophilic.

The hydrocarbon tail is electrically neutral and hydrophobic. The structure of a cell membrane is due these electrical properties of phospholipids and water.

The molecules form a double layer, with the hydrophilic heads facing outward, towards water, and the hydrophobic tails facing inward, towards one another. Credit: Ties van Brussel

 

These electrical properties determine how phospholipid molecules will behave when they are dissolved in water.

 

Electrically speaking, water is a polar molecule. The electrons in the water molecule are more strongly attracted to its oxygen atom than to its two hydrogen atoms. So, the side of the molecule where the two hydrogen atoms are has a slight positive charge, and the oxygen side has a small negative charge.

 

These polar properties of water cause it to attract the polar head of the phospholipid molecule, which is said to be hydrophilic, and repel its nonpolar tail, which is said to be hydrophobic.

 

When phospholipid molecules are dissolved in water, the electrical properties of the two substances work together to cause the phospholipid molecules to organize themselves into a membrane. The membrane closes onto itself into a little sphere called a liposome.

 

The phospholipid molecules form a bilayer two molecules thick. The polar hydrophilic heads face outward towards the water on both the inner and outer surface of the membrane. The hydrophobic tails are sandwiched between, facing each other.

 

While the phospholipid molecules remain fixed in their layer, with their heads facing out and their tails facing in, they can still move around with respect to each other, giving the membrane the fluid flexibility needed for life.

 

Phospholipid bilayer membranes are the basis of all terrestrial cell membranes.

 

Even on its own, a liposome can grow, reproduce and aid certain chemical reactions important to life, which is why some biochemists think that the formation of liposomes might have been the first step towards life.

 

At any rate, the formation of cell membranes must surely been an early step in life's emergence on Earth.

 

 

At the left, water, consisting of hydrogen (H) and oxygen (O), is a polar solvent.

Oxygen attracts electrons more strongly than hydrogen does, giving the hydrogen side of the molecule a net positive charge and the oxygen side a net negative charge.

The delta symbol ( ) indicates that the charge is partial, that is less than a full unit of positive or negative charge.

At right, methane is a non-polar solvent, due to the symmetrical distribution of hydrogen atoms (H) around a central carbon atom (C).

Credit: Jynto as modified by Paul Patton.

 

If some form of life exists on Titan, whether sea monster or (more likely) microbe, it would almost certainly need to have a cell membrane, just like every living thing on Earth does.

 

Could phospholipid bilayer membranes form in liquid methane on Titan? The answer is no. Unlike water, the methane molecule has an even distribution of electrical charges. It lacks water's polar qualities, and so couldn't attract the polar heads of phospholipid molecule.

 

This attraction is needed for the phospholipids to form an Earth-style cell membrane.

 

Experiments have been conducted where phospholipids are dissolved in non-polar liquids at Earthly room temperature. Under these conditions, the phospholipids form an 'inside-out' two layer membrane. The polar heads of the phospholipid molecules are at the center, attracted to one another by their electrical charges.

 

The non-polar tails face outward on each side of the inside-out membrane, facing the non-polar solvent.

 

 

 

At left, phospholipids are dissolved in water, a polar solvent.

They form a bilayer membrane, with their polar, hydrophilic heads facing outward towards water, and their hydrophobic tails facing each other.

At right, when phospholipids are dissolved in a non-polar solvent at Earthly room temperature, they form an inside-out membrane, with the polar heads attracting one another, and the non-polar tails facing outwards towards the non-polar solvent.

Based on figure 2 from Stevenson, Lunine, and Clancy (2015).

Credit: Paul Patton

 

Could Titanian life have an inside out phospholipid membrane?

 

The Cornell team concluded that this wouldn't work, for two reasons.

  • The first is that at the cryogenic temperatures of liquid methane, the tails of phospholipids become rigid, depriving any inside-out membrane that might form of the fluid flexibility needed for life.

  • The second is that two key ingredients of phospholipids; phosphorus and oxygen, are probably unavailable in the methane lakes of Titan.

In their search for Titanian cell membranes, the Cornell team needed to probe beyond the familiar realm of high school biology.

 

Although not composed of phospholipids, the scientists reasoned that any Titanian cell membrane would nevertheless be like the inside-out phospholipid membranes created in the lab. It would consist of polar molecules clinging together electrically in a solution of non-polar liquid methane.

 

What molecules might those be?

 

For answers the researchers looked to data from the Cassini spacecraft and from laboratory experiments that reproduced the chemistry of Titan's atmosphere.

 

Titan's atmosphere is known to have a very complex chemistry. It is made mostly of nitrogen and methane gas. When the Cassini spacecraft analyzed its composition using spectroscopy it found traces of a variety of compounds of carbon, nitrogen, and hydrogen, called nitriles and amines.

 

Researchers have simulated the chemistry of Titan's atmosphere in the lab by exposing mixtures of nitrogen and methane to sources of energy simulating sunlight on Titan.

 

A stew of organic molecules called 'tholins' is formed. It consists of compounds of hydrogen and carbon, called hydrocarbons, as well as nitriles and amines.

 

The Cornell investigators saw nitriles and amines as potential candidates for their Titanian cell membranes. Both are polar molecules that might stick together to form a membrane in non-polar liquid methane due to the polarity of nitrogen containing groups found in both of them. They reasoned that candidate molecules must be much smaller than phospholipids, so that they could form fluid membranes at liquid methane temperatures.

 

They considered nitriles and amines containing strings of between three and six carbon atoms. Nitrogen containing groups are called 'azoto'-groups, so the team named their hypothetical Titanian counterpart to the liposome the 'azotosome'.

 

Synthesizing azotosomes for experimental study would have been difficult and expensive, because the experiments would need to be conducted at the cryogenic temperatures of liquid methane.

 

But since the candidate molecules have been studied extensively for other reasons, the Cornell researchers felt justified in turning to the tools of computational chemistry to determine whether their candidate molecules could cohere as a flexible membrane in liquid methane.

 

Computational models have been used successfully to study conventional phospholipid cell membranes.

 

 

Acrylonitrile has been identified as a possible basis for cell membranes in liquid methane on Titan.

It is known to be present in Titan's atmosphere at a concentration of 10 parts per million and has been produced in laboratory simulations of the effects of energy sources on Titan's nitrogen-methane atmosphere.

As a small polar molecule capable of dissolving in liquid methane, it is a candidate substance for the formation of cell membranes in an alternative biochemistry on Titan.

Light blue: carbon atoms, dark blue: nitrogen atom, white: hydrogen atoms.

Credit: Ben Mills as modified by Paul Patton.

 

 

 

Polar acrylonitrile molecules align 'head' to 'tail' to form a membrane in non-polar liquid methane.

Light blue: carbon atoms, dark blue: nitrogen atoms, white: hydrogen atoms.

Credit: James Stevenson.

 

The group's computational simulations showed that some candidate substances could be ruled out because they would not cohere as a membrane, would be too rigid, or would form a solid.

 

Nevertheless, the simulations also showed that a number of substances would form membranes with suitable properties. One suitable substance is acrylonitrile, which Cassini showed is present in Titan's atmosphere at 10 parts per million concentration.

 

Despite the huge difference in temperature between cryogenic azotozomes and room temperature liposomes, the simulations showed them to exhibit strikingly similar properties of stability and response to mechanical stress.

 

Cell membranes, then, are possible for life in liquid methane.

 

 

Computational chemistry simulations show that acrylonitrile and some other small polar nitrogen containing organic molecules are capable of forming 'azotosomes' when they are dissolved on liquid methane.

Azotosomes are small membrane bounded spherules like the liposomes formed by phospholipids when they are dissolved in water.

The simulations show that acrylonitrile azotosomes would be both stable and flexible in cryogenically cold liquid methane, giving them the properties they need to function as cell membranes for hypothetical Titanian life, or for life on any world with liquid methane on its surface.

The azotosome shown is 9 nanometers in size, about the size of a virus.

Light blue: carbon atoms, dark blue: nitrogen atoms, white: hydrogen atoms.

Credit: James Stevenson.

 

The scientists from Cornell view their findings as nothing more than a first step towards showing that life in liquid methane is possible, and towards developing the methods that future spacecraft will need to search for it on Titan.

 

If life is possible in liquid methane, the implications ultimately extend far beyond Titan.

 

When seeking conditions suitable for life in the galaxy, astronomers typically search for exoplanets within a star's habitable zone, defined as the narrow range of distances over which a planet with an Earth-like atmosphere would have a surface temperature suitable for liquid water.

 

If methane life is possible, then stars would also have a methane habitable zone, a region where methane could exist as a liquid on a planet or moon, making methane life possible.

 

The number of habitable worlds in the galaxy would be greatly increased. Perhaps, on some worlds, methane life evolves into complex forms that we can scarcely imagine.

 

Maybe some of them are even a bit like sea monsters.

 

 

 

 

References