Science

‘Arsenic life’ study hailed by NASA as breakthrough in astrobiology retracted by Science due to contamination and flawed data

Microscope image of GFAJ-1, a bacterium that is shaped like tiny grains of arborio rice

After 15 years of debate, a study that announced the alleged discovery of an arsenic-eating microbe has been retracted by the journal Science due to contaminated and flawed data. However, the original study authors disagree with the move.

The microbe strain, labeled GFAJ-1, was recovered from the salty water of arsenic-rich Mono Lake in California by a research team led by Felisa Wolfe-Simon of NASA‘s Astrobiology Institute.

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