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Space microbes ‘aren’t so alien after all’

Genetic evidence shows bacteria on the International Space Station are adapting to survive, not to harm - and the findings are good news for any future manned mission to Mars

Joe Mellor by Joe Mellor
2019-01-08 18:25
in News, Science
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Space microbes aren’t so alien after all, suggests a new study.

Genetic evidence shows bacteria on the International Space Station (ISS) are adapting to survive, not to harm – and the findings are good news for any future manned mission to Mars.

A new study has found that despite its seemingly harsh conditions, the ISS is not causing bacteria to mutate into dangerous, antibiotic-resistant superbugs.

While researchers found that the bacteria isolated from the ISS did contain different genes than their Earthling counterparts, those genes did not make the bacteria more detrimental to human health.

The bacteria are instead simply responding, and perhaps evolving, to survive in a stressful environment.

Study leader Doctor Erica Hartmann, of Northwestern University in the United States, said: “There has been a lot of speculation about radiation, microgravity and the lack of ventilation and how that might affect living organisms, including bacteria.

“These are stressful, harsh conditions. Does the environment select for superbugs because they have an advantage? The answer appears to be ‘no.'”

As discussions about sending travellers to Mars gets more serious, there has been an increasing interest in understanding how microbes behave in enclosed environments.

Dr Hartmann said: “People will be in little capsules where they cannot open windows, go outside or circulate the air for long periods of time.

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“We’re genuinely concerned about how this could affect microbes.”

The ISS houses thousands of different microbes, which have travelled into space either on astronauts or in cargo.

The National Centre for Biotechnology Information in the US maintains a publicly available database, containing the genomic analyses of many of bacteria isolated from the ISS.

Dr Hartmann’s team used that data to compare the strains of Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus cereus on the ISS to those on Earth.

Found on human skin, S. aureus contains the tough-to-treat MRSA strain. B. cereus lives in soil and has fewer implications for human health.

Dr Hartmann said: “Bacteria that live on skin are very happy there.

“Your skin is warm and has certain oils and organic chemicals that bacteria really like.

“When you shed those bacteria, they find themselves living in a very different environment.

“A building’s surface is cold and barren, which is extremely stressful for certain bacteria.”

To adapt to living on surfaces, the bacteria containing advantageous genes are selected for or they mutate.

For those living on the ISS, the researchers said these genes potentially helped the bacteria respond to stress, so they could eat, grow and function in a harsh environment.

Study first author Dr Ryan Blaustein, a postdoctoral fellow in Hartmann’s lab, said: “Based on genomic analysis, it looks like bacteria are adapting to live, not evolving to cause disease.

“We didn’t see anything special about antibiotic resistance or virulence in the space station’s bacteria.”

Although that is good news for astronauts and potential space tourists, the researchers were careful to point out that unhealthy people can still spread illness on space stations and space shuttles.

Dr Hartmann added: “Everywhere you go, you bring your microbes with you.

“Astronauts are exceedingly healthy people. But as we talk about expanding space flight to tourists who do not necessarily meet astronaut criteria, we don’t know what will happen.

“We can’t say that if you put someone with an infection into a closed bubble in space that it won’t transfer to other people. It’s like when someone coughs on an airplane, and everyone gets sick.”

The findings were published in the journal mSystems.

 

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