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Remote automated multi-generational growth and observation of an animal in low Earth orbit
Authors:Elizabeth A Oczypok  Timothy Etheridge  Jacob Freeman  Louis Stodieck  Robert Johnsen  David Baillie  Nathaniel J Szewczyk
Affiliation:1Department of Biological Sciences, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA;2School of Graduate Entry Medicine and Health, University of Nottingham, Derby DE22 3DT, UK;3BioServe Space Technologies, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA;4Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada, V5A 1S6
Abstract:The ultimate survival of humanity is dependent upon colonization of other planetary bodies. Key challenges to such habitation are (patho)physiologic changes induced by known, and unknown, factors associated with long-duration and distance space exploration. However, we currently lack biological models for detecting and studying these changes. Here, we use a remote automated culture system to successfully grow an animal in low Earth orbit for six months. Our observations, over 12 generations, demonstrate that the multi-cellular soil worm Caenorhabditis elegans develops from egg to adulthood and produces progeny with identical timings in space as on the Earth. Additionally, these animals display normal rates of movement when fully fed, comparable declines in movement when starved, and appropriate growth arrest upon starvation and recovery upon re-feeding. These observations establish C. elegans as a biological model that can be used to detect changes in animal growth, development, reproduction and behaviour in response to environmental conditions during long-duration spaceflight. This experimental system is ready to be incorporated on future, unmanned interplanetary missions and could be used to study cost-effectively the effects of such missions on these biological processes and the efficacy of new life support systems and radiation shielding technologies.
Keywords:Caenorhabditis elegans  spaceflight  astrobiology  interplanetary transfer
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