A Review on Hypothesized Metabolic Pathways on Europa and Enceladus: Space-Flight Detection Considerations

Life (Basel). 2023 Aug 11;13(8):1726. doi: 10.3390/life13081726.

Abstract

Enceladus and Europa, icy moons of Saturn and Jupiter, respectively, are believed to be habitable with liquid water oceans and therefore are of interest for future life detection missions and mission concepts. With the limited data from missions to these moons, many studies have sought to better constrain these conditions. With these constraints, researchers have, based on modeling and experimental studies, hypothesized a number of possible metabolisms that could exist on Europa and Enceladus if these worlds host life. The most often hypothesized metabolisms are methanogenesis for Enceladus and methane oxidation/sulfate reduction on Europa. Here, we outline, review, and compare the best estimated conditions of each moon's ocean. We then discuss the hypothetical metabolisms that have been suggested to be present on these moons, based on laboratory studies and Earth analogs. We also detail different detection methods that could be used to detect these hypothetical metabolic reactions and make recommendations for future research and considerations for future missions.

Keywords: Enceladus; Europa; metabolism; methanogenesis; ocean world.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

JMW and LMB were supported by JPL Strategic Research and Technology Development award “Fate of Organics on Ocean Worlds” and LMW, LMB, MP, and KD were supported by NASA/NSF Ideas Lab “Becoming Biotic”. BT and KD were supported by NASA PSTAR “In-Situ Vent Analysis Divebot for Exobiology Research”. TCM was funded by NSF GRFP. This research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA (80NM0018D004). Copyright 2023 California Institute of Technology, all rights reserved.