Martian soil detox could lead to new medicines by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Apr 09, 2019
Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is one of humankind's major long-term health challenges. Now research into helping humans live on Mars could help address this looming problem. Dennis Claessen, associate professor at the Institute of Biology in Leiden University, the Netherlands works in synthetic biology, in which bacteria are engineered to solve problems that cannot be tackled - or are not tackled well - by 'wild' bacteria. A team of his students entered the iGEM International Genetically Engineered Machine competition with a solution to the problem of growing non-toxic plants on Mars, but needed 'Martian' gravity to test their ideas. "The soil on Mars has perchlorate chemical compounds in it, which can be toxic for humans," explains Prof. Claessen. High doses of perchlorate can inhibit the thyroid gland's uptake of iodine and interfere with foetal development. "Our students started 'building' a bacterium that would degrade the perchlorate to chlorine and oxygen, but they needed to know whether that bacterium would behave the same way in the partial gravity of Mars as it would on Earth." The challenge was to find a way to reproduce Mars gravity on Earth, and the students solved it using a random positioning machine (RPM). The first recorded experiment on living systems using machines to manipulate gravity was done in 1806 using a rotating waterwheel. Two hundred years later the RPM, designed by the Netherlands-based Airbus team for ESA, is the latest instrument developed to experiment in zero or reduced gravity without going into space. As its name suggests, the RPM continually changes its orientation at random, so that items placed within it have no opportunity to adjust to a steady gravity direction. The original design could successfully simulate zero gravity while the newer RPM 2.0 can additionally simulate partial gravity, the stages between normal Earth gravity and the weightless environment. "The RPM machines offer a great alternative to organisations looking to do experiments in zero and partial gravity," says Derk Schneemann at Verhaert Netherlands. "During their experiments they noticed that when bacteria grew in partial gravity, they became stressed as they accumulated waste around them that they couldn't get rid of. This holds great potential because when microbes belonging to the Streptomyces family become stressed, they usually start making antibiotics," adds Prof. Claessen. "Seventy percent of all the antibiotics humans use are derived from Streptomyces bacteria and we know they have the potential to produce even more. Using the RPM to stress them in new ways may help us to find ones we've never seen before."
Detoxifying soil on Mars and Earth Once the Dutch team is in place and has funding, research into Streptomyces microbes (which are naturally found in Earth's soil, where they play a vital role in breaking down organic matter) and antibiotics could also be done with the RPM. "To find that they hold the potential for discovering new antibiotics as well is even more exciting, as antibiotic resistance is something we need to tackle urgently," adds Derk Schneemann.
Space for health
Dust storm activity appears to pick up south of Opportunity Pasadena CA (JPL) Jan 18, 2019 Dust storm activity appears to have picked up again, with a regional storm tracking south about 124 miles (200 kilometers) to the west of Opportunity. The storm is expected to increase in opacity (tau) at the rover site to greater than 1.5 over the next few days. No signal from Opportunity has been heard since Sol 5111 (June 10, 2018) during the historic global dust storm. Opportunity likely experienced a low-power fault, a mission clock fault and an up-loss timer fault. Since the loss of si ... read more
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