Spacebound Bacteria Inspire Earthbound Remedies

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March 21, 2011

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

Joe Caspermeyer 
Arizona State University, Tempe 
480-727-0369 
joseph.caspermeyer@xxxxxxx 

MEDIA ADVISORY: 11-080

SPACEBOUND BACTERIA INSPIRE EARTHBOUND REMEDIES



WASHINGTON -- Recent research aboard the space shuttle is giving 
scientists a better understanding of how infectious disease occurs in 
space and could someday improve astronaut health and provide novel 
treatments for people on Earth. 

"With our space-based research efforts, including the International 
Space Station, we are not only continuing our human presence in 
space, but we are engaged in science that can make a real difference 
in people's lives here on Earth," said NASA Administrator Charles 
Bolden. "NASA's leadership in human spaceflight allows us to conduct 
innovative and ground-breaking science that reveals the unknown and 
unlocks the mysteries of how disease-causing agents work." 

The research involves an opportunistic pathogen known as Pseudomonas 
aeruginosa, the same bacterium that caused astronaut Fred Haise to 
become sick during the Apollo 13 mission to the moon in 1970. 

Scientists studying the bacterium aboard the shuttle hope to unlock 
the mysteries of how disease-causing agents work. They believe the 
research can lead to advanced vaccines and therapies to better fight 
infections. The findings are based on flight experiments with 
microbial pathogens on NASA shuttle missions to the International 
Space Station and appear in a recent edition of the journal Applied 
and Environmental Microbiology. 

"For the first time, we're able to see that two very different species 
of bacteria - Salmonella and Pseudomonas - share the same basic 
regulating mechanism, or master control switch, that micro-manages 
many of the microbes' responses to the spaceflight environment," said 
Cheryl Nickerson, associate professor at the Center for Infectious 
Diseases and Vaccinology, the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State 
University (ASU) in Tempe. "We have shown that spaceflight affects 
common regulators in both bacteria that invariably cause disease in 
healthy individuals [Salmonella] and those that cause disease only in 
people with compromised immune systems [Pseudomonas]." 

By studying the global gene expression patterns in bacterial pathogens 
like Pseudomonas and Salmonella, Nickerson's team learned more about 
how they react to reduced gravity. 

Pseudomonas aeruginosa can coexist as a benign microbe in healthy 
individuals, but poses a serious threat to people with compromised 
immune systems. It is the leading cause of death for those suffering 
from cystic fibrosis and is a serious risk to burn victims. However, 
a high enough dosage of Salmonella typhimurium always will cause 
disease, even in healthy individuals. 

During the initial study in 2006, two bacterial pathogens, Salmonella 
typhimurium and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and one fungal pathogen, 
Candida albicans, were launched to the station aboard shuttles. They 
were allowed to grow in appropriately contained vessels for several 
days. Nickerson's team was the first to evaluate global gene and 
protein expression (how the bacteria react at the molecular level) 
and virulence changes in microbes in response to reduced gravity. 

"We discovered that aspects of the environment that microbes 
encountered during spaceflight appeared to mimic key conditions that 
pathogens normally encounter in our bodies during the natural course 
of infection, particularly in the respiratory system, 
gastrointestinal system and urogenital tract," Nickerson said. NASA's 
Advanced Capabilities Division Director, Benjamin Neumann added that, 
"This means that in addition to safeguarding future space travelers, 
such research may aid the quest for better therapeutics against 
pathogens here on Earth." 

The initial study and follow-on space experiments show that 
spaceflight creates a low fluid shear environment, where liquids 
exert little force as they flow over the surface of cells. The low 
fluid shear environment of spaceflight affects the molecular genetic 
regulators that can make microbes more infectious. These same 
regulators might function in a similar way to regulate microbial 
virulence during the course of infection in the human body. 

"We have now shown that spaceflight conditions modified molecular 
pathways that are known to be involved in the virulence of 
Pseudomonas aeruginosa," said Aurelie Crabbe, a researcher in Dr. 
Nickerson's lab at ASU and the lead author of the paper. "Future work 
will establish whether Pseudomonas also exhibits increased virulence 
following spaceflight as did Salmonella." 

NASA's Fundamental Space Biology Program sponsored and funded the 
research conducted by Crabbe and Nickerson along with their 
colleagues at the Biodesign Institute at ASU. They collaborated with 
the University of Colorado School of Medicine, University of Arizona, 
Belgian Nuclear Research Center, Villanova University, Tulane 
University, Affymetrix Inc, and NASA scientists. 

For an abstract of the journal article on this research, visit: 



http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21169425 


For more information about NASA programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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