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Engineer To Launch Bacteria Into Space Aboard the Final Mission of Space Shuttle Atlantis
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Engineer
Cynthia Collins Will Study the Impacts of Microgravity on
Dangerous Bacteria
There will be some very interesting passengers on the final
mission of the NASA Space Shuttle Atlantis scheduled to launch
July 8, 2011: thousands of bacteria.
Cynthia Collins, assistant professor of chemical and
biological engineering at Rensselaer, is leading a series of
experiments called Micro-2A that will be aboard the shuttle
during its scheduled 12-day mission. The research seeks to
understand how microgravity changes the way potentially
dangerous bacteria grows. In particular, the research will
examine how they form difficult-to-kill colonies called
biofilms. The research has important implications for
protecting astronauts while they are in space in enclosed and
difficult-to-clean spaces, such as the International Space
Station, or during extended space missions deeper into our
solar system. It also provides new information in the fight
against ever-more virulent bacterial infections such as staph,
food poisoning, sepsis, and pneumonia.
Partnering with Collins on the project are nanobiotechnology
expert Jonathan Dordick, the Howard P. Isermann Professor of
Chemical and Biological Engineering at Rensselaer and director
of the Rensselaer Center for Biotechnology and
Interdisciplinary Studies, and thin films expert Joel Plawsky,
professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological
Engineering. The NASA Ames Research Center is funding the
experiment.
This is the second time that Collins’ research will be
included on the shuttle. Her research on bacteria was also
aboard the shuttle mission that launched May 14, 2010. Collins
has been analyzing the results of this previous work and will
use this new series of experiments to test some of the results
she has seen.
“We are clearly seeing altered biofilm formation during
space flight,” she said. “There are some clear differences
between the amount of biofilm formed in normal gravity and
microgravity. These differences also appear to be organism
dependent, with different organisms responding very differently
to the environment in space.”
The bacteria that Collins will include are Pseudomonas
aeruginosa and Staphylococcus aureus. These
bacteria are responsible for more hospital-acquired infections
than any other, according to Collins. The Center for Disease
Control places hospital-acquired infections such as those
caused by these bacteria as the fourth leading cause of death
in the United States.
Biofilms are complex, three-dimensional microbial
communities. Most biofilms, including those found in the human
body, are harmless. Some biofilms, however, have been shown to
be associated with disease. Researchers like Collins are
discovering that the bacteria within these colonies have very
different properties, including increased resistance to
antimicrobials, compared with bacteria not encased in a
biofilm.
Collins and her team will send up 16 devices, called Group
Activation Packs (GAPs) and each containing eight vials of
bacteria, aboard the shuttle. The GAPs and other hardware used
by the Collins and her team were developed by BioServe Space
Technologies. While in orbit, astronauts will begin the
experiment by manipulating the sealed GAPs and combining the
bacteria with nutrients and a surface on which they can form
biofilms. At the same time, Collins will perform the same
actions with identical GAPs on Earth at the Kennedy Space
Center in Florida. After the shuttle returns, her team will
compare the resulting biofilms to see how the behavior of
bacteria and development of biofilms in microgravity differs
from the Earth-bound control group.
In addition, the research team will also test if a newly
developed, antimicrobial surface — developed by Dordick at
Rensselaer — can help slow the growth of methicillin resistant
Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, on Earth and in
microgravity. Actual MRSA, the bacteria responsible for
antibiotic-resistant infections, will not be used for the
safety of those on board. A different and safer strain of
bacteria with similar properties will serve as a proxy. The new
surface developed by Dordick utilizes an enzyme found in nature
and kills 100 percent of MRSA within 20 minutes of contact.
The new technology marries carbon nanotubes with
lysostaphin, a naturally occurring enzyme used by
non-pathogenic strains of staph bacteria to defend against
staph growth. The resulting nanotube-enzyme
biomaterial can be mixed with any number of surface finishes.
In tests, it was mixed with ordinary latex house paint. More
information on the surface can be found at: http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2759
.
Astronauts have been shown to have an increased
susceptibility to infection while in microgravity, making a
deeper understanding of how these bacteria behave in space of
particular importance, according to Collins. In addition to its
importance in planning future space missions, the research also
has important applications here on Earth. The conditions in
space are similar to those produced within the human body on
several levels. Understanding how bacteria thrive in space may
also provide insight into how they develop once they enter the
human body.
For additional information on Collins’ research, go to www.rpi.edu/~collic3/Cynthia_Collins.
More information on Collins previous shuttle experiment can be
found at http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2723
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Published
June 23,
2011 |
Contact: Gabrielle DeMarco
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: demarg@rpi.edu |
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