Tardigrades: Microscopic Superheroes — Passage and Quiz

Grades
5
6
7
8
Standards
MS-LS2-1
RI.6.3
RI.7.3
RI.8.8
PRINT+DIGITAL RESOURCE
This learning resource is available in interactive and printable formats. The interactive worksshet can be played online and assigned to students. The Printable PDF version can be downloaded and printed for completion by hand.
ABOUT THIS READER
Aligned to MS-LS1-1, this passage examines how tardigrade cell structures (TDP proteins, DNA-repair enzymes) allow survival in space, deep sea, and volcanoes. Students analyze cryptobiosis mechanisms, radiation resistance, and temperature tolerance (-272°C to 150°C) through the lens of cellular structure/function relationships.
Publisher: Workybooks
|
Written by:Neha Goel Tripathi
|
Illustrated by:
CONTENT PREVIEW

Tardigrades: Microscopic Superheroes

Tardigrades possess extraordinary cellular adaptations that allow them to defy death in environments lethal to other lifeforms. When faced with extreme dehydration, their cells don’t simply dry out—they undergo cryptobiosis, a state of suspended animation where metabolic activity drops to 0.01% of normal levels.

 

In this "tun" state, tardigrades replace the water in their cells with special Tardigrade-Specific Disordered Proteins (TDPs). These remarkable molecules form a glass-like matrix that preserves cellular structures intact for decades, preventing the fatal damage that normally occurs when cells lose water.

 

But their survival toolkit doesn’t stop there. Tardigrade cells produce:

●       DNA armor: Unique repair enzymes that instantly fix radiation-shattered DNA strands, allowing survival in space’s intense cosmic rays

●       Thermal protectants: Sugar-based molecules that act as cellular antifreeze (-272°c) and heat shields (150°c)

●       Pressure-resistant membranes: Reinforced cell walls that withstand 6,000 times atmospheric pressure

These microscopic superheroes have conquered Earth’s most hostile environments:

●       Mountain Peaks: Thriving at 6,000m altitudes in the Himalayas where oxygen is scarce and UV radiation intense

●       Ocean Depths: Flourishing near hydrothermal vents where pressures reach 1,000+ atmospheres and temperatures swing violently

●       Space Vacuum: Surviving unprotected on satellite exteriors during ESA’s 2007 FOTON-M3 mission, enduring complete vacuum, freezing temperatures, and lethal solar radiation

 

Fun Fact: When NASA exposed tardigrades to space vacuum, 68% survived the ordeal—and some even produced healthy offspring afterward!

Quiz

1. What cellular state do tardigrades enter when dehydrated?

A
Photosynthesis
B
Cryptobiosis
C
Mitosis
D
Osmosis

2. Which protein protects tardigrade cells without water?

A
Hemoglobin
B
Tardigrade-specific Disordered Proteins (TDPs)
C
Collagen
D
Keratin

3. What makes tardigrade cells unique compared to human cells?

A
They photosynthesize
B
They lack DNA
C
They survive complete dehydration
D
They’re the largest known cells

4. Where have tardigrades NOT been found living?

A
Deep-sea vents
B
Active volcanoes
C
Himalayan glaciers
D
Outer space

5. The term "cryptobiosis" means:

A
Rapid reproduction
B
Temporary metabolic shutdown
C
Glowing in the dark
D
Swimming in circles

6. In this passage, "TDPs" refers to:

A
Toxic defense poisons
B
Water-replacement proteins
C
Energy-producing organelles
D
Reproductive cells

7. Why can’t human cells survive like tardigrade cells?

A
Our cells lack TDPs and DNA-repair enzymes
B
Human cells are too large
C
We don’t have eight legs
D
Our cells photosynthesize

8. How did space experiments prove tardigrades’ cellular toughness?

A
They grew larger in zero-gravity
B
They survived vacuum/radiation
C
They reproduced faster in space
D
They glowed in the dark

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