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Solid-State Single-Molecule Sensing with the Electronic Life-Detection Instrument for Enceladus/Europa (ELIE)

Title: Solid-State Single-Molecule Sensing with the Electronic Life-Detection Instrument for Enceladus/Europa (ELIE)
Authors: Carr, Christopher E.; Ramírez-Colón, José L.; Duzdevich, Daniel; Lee, Sam; Taniguchi, Masateru; Ohshiro, Takahito; Komoto, Yuki; Soderblom, Jason M.; Zuber, M.T.
Source: Astrobiology ; volume 23, issue 10, page 1056-1070 ; ISSN 1531-1074 1557-8070
Publisher Information: SAGE Publications
Publication Year: 2023
Description: Growing evidence of the potential habitability of Ocean Worlds across our solar system is motivating the advancement of technologies capable of detecting life as we know it—sharing a common ancestry or physicochemical origin with life on Earth—or don't know it, representing a distinct emergence of life different than our one known example. Here, we propose the Electronic Life-detection Instrument for Enceladus/Europa (ELIE), a solid-state single-molecule instrument payload that aims to search for life based on the detection of amino acids and informational polymers (IPs) at the parts per billion to trillion level. As a first proof-of-principle in a laboratory environment, we demonstrate the single-molecule detection of the amino acid L-proline at a 10 μM concentration in a compact system. Based on ELIE's solid-state quantum electronic tunneling sensing mechanism, we further propose the quantum property of the HOMO–LUMO gap (energy difference between a molecule's highest energy-occupied molecular orbital and lowest energy-unoccupied molecular orbital) as a novel metric to assess amino acid complexity. Finally, we assess the potential of ELIE to discriminate between abiotically and biotically derived α-amino acid abundance distributions to reduce the false positive risk for life detection. Nanogap technology can also be applied to the detection of nucleobases and short sequences of IPs such as, but not limited to, RNA and DNA. Future missions may utilize ELIE to target preserved biosignatures on the surface of Mars, extant life in its deep subsurface, or life or its biosignatures in a plume, surface, or subsurface of ice moons such as Enceladus or Europa. One-Sentence Summary: A solid-state nanogap can determine the abundance distribution of amino acids, detect nucleic acids, and shows potential for detecting life as we know it and life as we don't know it.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: English
DOI: 10.1089/ast.2022.0119
Availability: https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2022.0119; https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full-xml/10.1089/ast.2022.0119; https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1089/ast.2022.0119
Rights: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ; https://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license
Accession Number: edsbas.2BBBED8D
Database: BASE