Astrovirology: how viruses enhance our understanding of life in the Universe.

IF 1.7 4区 物理与天体物理 Q3 ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
International Journal of Astrobiology Pub Date : 2023-08-01 Epub Date: 2023-04-05 DOI:10.1017/s1473550423000058
Gareth Trubl, Kenneth M Stedman, Kathryn F Bywaters, Emily E Matula, Pacifica Sommers, Simon Roux, Nancy Merino, John Yin, Jason T Kaelber, Aram Avila-Herrera, Peter Anto Johnson, John Christy Johnson, Schuyler Borges, Peter K Weber, Jennifer Pett-Ridge, Penelope J Boston
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Abstract

Viruses are the most numerically abundant biological entities on Earth. As ubiquitous replicators of molecular information and agents of community change, viruses have potent effects on the life on Earth, and may play a critical role in human spaceflight, for life-detection missions to other planetary bodies and planetary protection. However, major knowledge gaps constrain our understanding of the Earth's virosphere: (1) the role viruses play in biogeochemical cycles, (2) the origin(s) of viruses and (3) the involvement of viruses in the evolution, distribution and persistence of life. As viruses are the only replicators that span all known types of nucleic acids, an expanded experimental and theoretical toolbox built for Earth's viruses will be pivotal for detecting and understanding life on Earth and beyond. Only by filling in these knowledge and technical gaps we will obtain an inclusive assessment of how to distinguish and detect life on other planetary surfaces. Meanwhile, space exploration requires life-support systems for the needs of humans, plants and their microbial inhabitants. Viral effects on microbes and plants are essential for Earth's biosphere and human health, but virus-host interactions in spaceflight are poorly understood. Viral relationships with their hosts respond to environmental changes in complex ways which are difficult to predict by extrapolating from Earth-based proxies. These relationships should be studied in space to fully understand how spaceflight will modulate viral impacts on human health and life-support systems, including microbiomes. In this review, we address key questions that must be examined to incorporate viruses into Earth system models, life-support systems and life detection. Tackling these questions will benefit our efforts to develop planetary protection protocols and further our understanding of viruses in astrobiology.

天体病毒学:病毒如何增强我们对宇宙生命的理解
病毒是地球上数量最多的生物实体。作为分子信息的普遍复制者和社区变化的推动者,病毒对地球上的生命有着强大的影响,并可能在载人航天、对其他行星体的生命探测任务和行星保护中发挥关键作用。然而,主要的知识差距限制了我们对地球病毒圈的理解:(1)病毒在生物地球化学循环中的作用,(2)病毒的起源,以及(3)病毒在生命进化、分布和持久性中的参与。由于病毒是唯一跨越所有已知类型核酸的复制因子,为地球病毒构建的扩展实验和理论工具箱将对检测和理解地球内外的生命至关重要。只有填补这些知识和技术空白,我们才能对如何区分和探测其他行星表面的生命进行全面评估。与此同时,太空探索需要生命支持系统来满足人类、植物及其微生物居民的需求。病毒对微生物和植物的影响对地球生物圈和人类健康至关重要,但人们对太空飞行中病毒与宿主的相互作用知之甚少。病毒与宿主的关系以复杂的方式对环境变化做出反应,这很难通过基于地球的代理来预测。这些关系应该在太空中进行研究,以充分了解太空飞行将如何调节病毒对人类健康和生命支持系统(包括微生物组)的影响。在这篇综述中,我们讨论了必须研究的关键问题,以将病毒纳入地球系统模型、生命支持系统和生命检测。解决这些问题将有利于我们制定行星保护协议,并进一步了解天体生物学中的病毒。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Astrobiology
International Journal of Astrobiology 地学天文-地球科学综合
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
11.80%
发文量
45
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: International Journal of Astrobiology is the peer-reviewed forum for practitioners in this exciting interdisciplinary field. Coverage includes cosmic prebiotic chemistry, planetary evolution, the search for planetary systems and habitable zones, extremophile biology and experimental simulation of extraterrestrial environments, Mars as an abode of life, life detection in our solar system and beyond, the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, the history of the science of astrobiology, as well as societal and educational aspects of astrobiology. Occasionally an issue of the journal is devoted to the keynote plenary research papers from an international meeting. A notable feature of the journal is the global distribution of its authors.
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