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    Multiplication of microbes below 0.690 water activity: implications for terrestrial and extraterrestrial life

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    Since a key requirement of known life-forms is available water (water-activity; aw), searches for signatures of past life in terrestrial and extraterrestrial environments have recently targeted places known to have contained significant quantities of biologically available water. The lower limit of water activity that enables cell division is ~0.605 which, until now, was only known to be exhibited by a single eukaryote; the sugar-tolerant, fungal xerophile Xeromyces bisporus. The first forms of life on Earth were, however, prokaryotic. Furthermore, early life on Earth inhabited high-salt environments, suggesting an ability to withstand low water activity. Recent evidence indicates that some halophilic Archaea and Bacteria have water activity limits more or less equal to those of X. bisporus. Regardless of species, cellular systems are sensitive to minute differences in water activity (of w-units) so there is a need to determine water-activity values to three decimal places. We discuss water activity in relation to the limits of Earth’s present-day biosphere; the possibility of microbial multiplication by utilizing water from thin, aqueous films or non-liquid sources; whether prokaryotes were the first organisms able to multiply at the 0.605-aw limit; and whether extraterrestrial aqueous milieu of ≥0.605 aw can resemble fertile microbial habitats found on Earth
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