Hostile habitat (Image: Richard Cummins/Corbis)
LIFE may not be built on a foundation of poison after all.
A year ago, Felisa Wolfe-Simon, then at NASA's Astrobiology Institute
in Menlo Park, California, stirred controversy with claims that, in the
lab, she had encouraged bacteria from an arsenic-rich lake in
California to swap the usual phosphorus in their DNA for toxic arsenic.
Now, after trying to grow the same strain of bacteria in a soup containing arsenic, other researchers have failed to repeat the findings.
"To the limit of what our spectrometer will detect, there's no arsenic
in the DNA," says Rosie Redfield of the University of British Columbia
in Vancouver, Canada, who posted her results to a blog this week.
Wolfe-Simon has defended her original
results and is continuing to analyse her lab-grown bacteria at the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. "As far as we know, all the data
in our paper still stand," she told New Scientist. "We shall certainly know much more by next year."
http://www.newscientist.com/
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