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The recent (Sept. 2020) report of “Phosphine gas in the cloud decks of Venus” states that phosphine (PH3) is only known to occur on Earth due to anaerobic life. Quoting from a report in the New York Times:

But scientists have yet to explain how Earth microbes make it. “There’s not a lot of understanding of where it’s coming from, how it forms, things like that,” said Matthew Pasek, a geoscientist at the University of South Florida in Tampa. “We’ve seen it associated with where microbes are at, but we have not seen a microbe do it, which is a subtle difference, but an important one.”

What are the current hypotheses about how phosphine is formed?

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  • $\begingroup$ I haven't had a chance to read the full Nature Astronomy paper, but I would assume that the authors cover at least some of this in there. $\endgroup$
    – MattDMo
    Commented Sep 14, 2020 at 18:40
  • $\begingroup$ @MattDMo — Not really. One of the co-authors of the paper is also an co-author of the paper I quote in my own answer, and her work is referenced. But the problem would seem to be that the conditions in which phosphine appears to be produced biologically on Earth, are very different from those in Venetian clouds. $\endgroup$
    – David
    Commented Sep 14, 2020 at 19:23
  • $\begingroup$ The number of researches of venusian phosphine will promptly go up to the thousands, measuring and detecting all the other biological signatures which can exist on venus astronomically and in the lab, and there will be some high-profile critics of the study. A lot more evidence will be coming in soon, for the moment it's a bit murky. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 15, 2020 at 7:15
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    $\begingroup$ I have made some presentational changes to your question, given that what was "today" is now yesterday and tomorrow... I also thought it fairest to describe the Nature Astronomy paper using its exact tile, gave the formula of phosphine, and added the astrobiology tag. Hope that's OK. $\endgroup$
    – David
    Commented Sep 15, 2020 at 8:43

2 Answers 2

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The background to phosphine production on Earth can be found in a review entitled “Natural Products Containing ‘Rare’ Organophosphorus Functional Groups” by Petkowski et al. in Molecules 24, 866 (2019). The four authors are also co-authors of the Nature Astronomy paper. They state (my emphasis):

The detailed biosynthetic pathway for microbial phosphine production is currently unknown. For detailed discussion of the biological production in the environment, its biochemistry, and atmospheric chemistry see three recent papers by Bains, Sousa-Silva and colleagues [482,494,495].

These three papers are from the authors, one of which I followed up:

  1. Bains,W.; Petkowski,J.J.; Sousa-Silva,C.; Seager,S. New environmental model for thermodynamic ecology of biological phosphine production. Sci. Total Environ. 2019, 658, 521–536.

The abstract to this includes (my emphasis):

In this paper we show through thermodynamic calculations that, in specific environments, the combined action of phosphate reducing and phosphite disproportionating bacteria can produce phosphine. Phosphate-reducing bacteria can capture energy from the reduction of phosphate to phosphite through coupling phosphate reduction to NADH oxidation. Our hypothesis describes how the phosphate chemistry in an environmental niche is coupled to phosphite generation in ground water, which in turn is coupled to the phosphine production in water and atmosphere, driven by a specific microbial ecology.

The paper itself is not of the ‘author-pays’ type, so you may need institutional access to read it. There is a graphical summary provided, however, which summarizes the hypothesis:

phosphine production hypothesis

The paper consists of detailed thermodynamic arguments for the scheme suggested at the particular temperature, pH and anaerobic environment of marshes and swamps. Under these conditions, the authors postulate that the purpose of posphine production is to gain energy†. The analogy would be with the production of NADH as in anaerobic glycolysis to gain energy, but needing to be reoxidized to NAD+ to allow this to continue. The reduction of phosphate to do this would be analogous to the reduction of pyruvate to lactate or to ethanol. Like ethanol, phosphine would be a by-product of no value to the organism.

However the possible role envisaged for phosphine production in Venusian clouds is different. In the Supplementary Information for the Nature Astrobiology paper, there is the following:

Initial modelling based on terrestrial biochemistry suggests that biochemical reduction of phosphate to phosphine is thermodynamically feasible under Venus cloud conditions. Biological phosphine production on Venus is likely to be energy requiring. However, life can make substantial energy investment into compounds that provide important biological functionality. There are many potential useful biological functions including signaling, defense, or metal capture for which phosphine has useful properties, so endergonic biosynthesis cannot be ruled out.

The suggestion here is that phosphine is a useful product, synthesized at an energetic cost.

The only biochemical connection between the two would be that if, as appears likely, life on Earth can produce phosphine (by biochemical pathways that remain to be discovered), then these same biochemical processes would be candidates for phosphine production by life on Venus if the authors are correct in arguing that (at least known) non-biological candidates have been excluded. The question does not ask for opinions on the latter, nor would I presume to present those that I hold.


† The thermodynamic approach involves calculation of Gibbs Free Energy changes (ΔG) for reactions. Often on this site discussing standard biochemistry we (or at least I) talk in terms of standard free energies — ΔG˚ (or ΔG˚′ for normal cellular conditions). However the actual value of ΔG for a reaction is influenced by temperature and the concentration of reactants (which will include hydrogen ions), so that the ΔG calculated for terrestrial marshes and the like is likely to differ from that in Venusian clouds.

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    $\begingroup$ The paper also appears to be on arXiv arxiv.org/abs/2009.06593 $\endgroup$
    – usernumber
    Commented Sep 15, 2020 at 8:23
  • $\begingroup$ @usernumber — That is a preprint of the Nature Astronomy paper, the final version of which is freely available, I believe. However, clearly some people have known about it for a while. $\endgroup$
    – David
    Commented Sep 15, 2020 at 9:16
  • $\begingroup$ It looks like a good read of Bains's related work would be of interest to the OP. Trivalent Phosphorus and Phosphines as Components of Biochemistry in Anoxic Environments is another that looks worthwhile (though I come to this from the physics side). According to the Nature Astronomy paper (Greaves et al) Bains has another paper on the way, but that's more on the Venusian side. $\endgroup$
    – Chris H
    Commented Sep 15, 2020 at 13:18
  • $\begingroup$ I guess the reasonable follow-on question would be whether the process described there could feasibly operate in the sulfuric clouds of Venus. $\endgroup$
    – T.E.D.
    Commented Sep 16, 2020 at 0:56
  • $\begingroup$ @T.E.D. The atmosphere in Venus is mostly carbon dioxide. Only a trace amount of sulfur is found. Also, hydrogen was theorized to have present in relatively short supply in the Venusian atmosphere but most of them is lost to space with the remainder(trace) being bound up in sulfuric acid and hydrogen sulfide. Also, the Vesuvian clouds composing of sulfuric acid are formed in the upper atmosphere. Even if it rains, it evaporates around 25 km above the surface and thus not affecting the microbes present in the ground. But research is still going about the feasibility of this cycle on Venus. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 16, 2020 at 5:38
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Detection and role of phoshine in phosphorus cycle was first discussed in 19881. They examined phosphorus cycle in open-air sewage treatment plants where they discovered a gas releasing from sediments of 1-2 meter deep water which was found to be phosphine. They calculated that 5 g of phosphine was released from 2000 m3 of sewage. They also further proposed that:

Under laboratory conditions, it was also demonstrated that phosphine is released by bacterial reduction from a medium containing inorganic phosphorus. The phosphorus content of the medium decreases by nearly one half.

This bacterial reduction of phosphine was further explained in a 2000 paper2(Also see ref. 3):

A microbial basis for bioreductive generation of phosphine is proposed, which could account at least in part for the presence of this toxic gas in natural anaerobic environments and in sewage and landfill gases. Phosphine generation under anaerobic growth conditions was dependent upon both the culture inoculum source (animal faeces) and enrichment culture conditions. Phosphine was detected in headspace gases from mixed cultures under conditions promoting fermentative growth of mixed acid and butyric acid bacteria, either in the presence or absence of methane generation. Monoseptic cultures of certain mixed acid fermentors (Escherichia coli, Salmonella gallinarum, and Salmonella arizonae) and solvent fermentors (Clostridium sporogenes, Clostridium acetobutyricum and Clostridium cochliarium) also generated phosphine. Generation of phosphine by these bacteria could explain the apparent correlation between methanogenesis and the formation of phosphine in nature.

But this phosphine reduction was found to be thermodynamically unfavorable and hence a proper biochemical reduction pathway has not been identified4:

Thermodynamic considerations indicate that it is very improbable that the reduction of phosphate to phosphine is endergonic. Therefore the generation of phosphine cannot be compared with sulphidogenesis and methanogenesis. There seems to be a link between the existence of highly reactive gaseous phosphorus compounds and increased levels of metal corrosion. The reactive compounds could be formed by micro-organisms or they are liberated from phosphorus-containing impurities in the iron by the action of bacterial metabolites. The biochemical pathways responsible for the production of gaseous phosphorus compounds have not been characterized yet.

But then in a 2014 paper, a possible redox reduction method has been proposed5:

No other common reducing agent can produce phosphine at the concentration at which it is observed in nature, as reduction from phosphate is energetically unfeasible unless phosphite or hypophosphite are present in the environment (important members in phosphorus cycle). Phosphite and hypophosphite generate phosphine and phosphate from disproportionation reactions:

$$\ce{4H2PO3^− + H+ -> PH3 + 3H2PO4−}$$

$$\ce{2H2PO2− + H+ -> PH3 + H2PO4−}$$

Phosphine production is primarily dependent on the concentration of phosphite and hypophosphite, but is also dependent on pH, temperature, and total dissolved P concentration. If the majority of the reduced P occurs as hypophosphite, then more PH3 should be expected than if the reduced P occurs as phosphite.

Conclusion: Phosphine should be/is considered to be an integral member in phosphorus biochemical cycle as it is found to be formed from the reduction of phosphites/hypophophosphites (important members in PBC). About 10% of the phosphorus produced in the atmosphere from PBC is PH3. Direct production of phosphine gas occurs in some specialized, local conditions like deep-marine environment where PH3 concentration was found to be 0.01 ng/m3 - 100 ng/m3.

PBC is itself an important process for sustaining life on Earth. It synthesize life-sustaining molecules important for the biosphere. Since, it is found in Venus, we can hypothesize anaerobic life on Venus although it hasn't been confirmed yet. In future, we might see life on Venus.

References

  1. Dévai, I., Felföldy, L., Wittner, I. et al. Detection of phosphine: new aspects of the phosphorus cycle in the hydrosphere. Nature 333, 343–345 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1038/333343a0
  2. Jenkins, R & Morris, T & Craig, P & Ritchie, A.W & Ostah, N. (2000). Phosphine generation by mixed- and monoseptic-cultures of anaerobic bacteria. The Science of the total environment. 250. 73-81. 10.1016/S0048-9697(00)00368-5.
  3. Liu Z, Jia S, Wang B, Zhang T, Liu S. Preliminary investigation on the role of microorganisms in the production of phosphine. J Environ Sci (China). 2008 ;20(7):885-890. doi:10.1016/s1001-0742(08)62142-7
  4. Biological formation of volatile phosphorus compounds Joris Roels, Willy Verstraete, Bioresource Technology, Volume 79, Issue 3, September 2001, Pages 243-250, DOI: 10.1016/S0960-8524(01)00032-3
  5. Phosphorus redox biogeochemistry, Matthew A. Pasek, Jacqueline M. Sampson, Zachary Atlas, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Oct 2014, 111 (43) 15468-15473; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1408134111
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    $\begingroup$ "Conclusion: Phosphorus biochemical cycle is an important cycle for sustaining life on Earth." I don't wish to be critical of another answer, but I cannot see how this statement can be concluded from the (excellently presented) information you present. You make no mention of a cycle or explain the fate of the phosphine. Even if it is reoxidized to phosphate, you do not state how much it contributes to overall phosphate availability. Phosphorus is a necessary component of living things, but I doubt that it depends on a phosphate/phosphine cycle. $\endgroup$
    – David
    Commented Sep 15, 2020 at 9:12
  • $\begingroup$ @David Thank you for the feedback. I tweaked my answer a little bit. $\endgroup$ Commented Sep 15, 2020 at 9:45

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