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No Effect of Microgravity and Simulated Mars Gravity on Final Bacterial Cell Concentrations on the International Space Station: Applications to Space Bioproduction

Authors :
Nicol Caplin
Jeannine Doswald-Winkler
Jutta Krause
Stefano S. Pellari
Rob Van Houdt
Michele Balsamo
Luca Parmitano
Rosa Santomartino
Kai Finster
Petra Rettberg
Jennifer Wadsworth
Ilse Coninx
Bernd Rattenbacher
Ralf Moeller
Charles S. Cockell
Natalie Leys
Andrea Koehler
Magdalena Herová
Felix M. Fuchs
Lobke Zuijderduijn
Annemiek C. Waajen
Fabrizio Carubia
Natasha Nicholson
Wessel de Wit
Alessandro Wasum Mariani
Giacomo Luciani
R. Craig Everroad
Valfredo Zolesi
René Demets
Claire-Marie Loudon
Source :
Santomartino, R, Waajen, A C, de Wit, W, Nicholson, N, Parmitano, L, Loudon, C M, Moeller, R, Rettberg, P, Fuchs, F M, Van Houdt, R, Finster, K, Coninx, I, Krause, J, Koehler, A, Caplin, N, Zuijderduijn, L, Zolesi, V, Balsamo, M, Mariani, A, Pellari, S S, Carubia, F, Luciani, G, Leys, N, Doswald-Winkler, J, Herová, M, Wadsworth, J, Everroad, R C, Rattenbacher, B, Demets, R & Cockell, C S 2020, ' No Effect of Microgravity and Simulated Mars Gravity on Final Bacterial Cell Concentrations on the International Space Station : Applications to Space Bioproduction ', Frontiers in Microbiology, vol. 11, 579156 . https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.579156, Santomartino, R, Waajen, A, Nicholson, T, Parmitano, L, Loudon, C M, Moeller, R, Rettberg, P, Fuchs, F M, Van Houdt, R, Finster, K, Coninx, I, Krause, J, Koehler, A, Caplin, N, Zuijderduijn, L, Zolesi, V, Balsamo, M, Mariani, A, Pellari, S S, Carubia, F, Luciani, G, Leys, N, Doswald-Winkler, J, Herova, M, Wadsworth, J, Everroad, R C, Rattenbacher, B, Demets, R & Cockell, C S 2020, ' No Effect of Microgravity and Simulated Mars Gravity on Final Bacterial Cell Concentrations on the International Space Station: Applications to Space Bioproduction ', Frontiers in Microbiology . https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.579156, Frontiers in Microbiology, Frontiers in Microbiology, Vol 11 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Microorganisms perform countless tasks on Earth and they are expected to be essential for human space exploration. Despite the interest in the responses of bacteria to space conditions, the findings on the effects of microgravity have been contradictory, while the effects of Martian gravity are nearly unknown. We performed the ESA BioRock experiment on the International Space Station to study microbe-mineral interactions in microgravity, simulated Mars gravity and simulated Earth gravity, as well as in ground gravity controls, with three bacterial species: Sphingomonas desiccabilis, Bacillus subtilis, and Cupriavidus metallidurans. To our knowledge, this was the first experiment to study simulated Martian gravity on bacteria using a space platform. Here, we tested the hypothesis that different gravity regimens can influence the final cell concentrations achieved after a multi-week period in space. Despite the different sedimentation rates predicted, we found no significant differences in final cell counts and optical densities between the three gravity regimens on the ISS. This suggests that possible gravity-related effects on bacterial growth were overcome by the end of the experiment. The results indicate that microbial-supported bioproduction and life support systems can be effectively performed in space (e.g., Mars), as on Earth.

Details

ISSN :
1664302X
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7615be7053b22200187c6e2f42daf554
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2020.579156