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  • 101
    Publication Date: 2019-10-23
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN72395 , Young Scientist Program Night of Science; Aug 15, 2019; Moffett Field, CA; United States
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  • 102
    Publication Date: 2019-12-19
    Description: Behavioral characteristics of D.melanogaster are strongly influenced by intrinsic and extrinsic factors, allowing scientists to assess how changes in physiology or environment manifest into behavior. Conversely, assessing changes in behavior of specimens provides valuable information about how the physiology of that organism responds to external changes. In this project, we developed a computer program to automate behavioral analyses of larvae and adult D. melanogaster aboard the International Space Station using on-board video recordings. Utilizing freely available libraries for Python, we set parameters to compute the number of animals, amount of locomotion as distance or movement, and the change in the perimeter of the larvae's outer shape to quantify behaviors such as curling or peristaltic full body wall contractions. Results show that our program is an efficient tool for analysis of larvae and adult locomotive behavior, thus providing scientists with a low-cost, efficient, and reliable method of quantifying behavioral data.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN69423 , Annual Meeting of the American Society for Gravitational and Space Research; Nov 20, 2019 - Nov 23, 2019; Denver, CO; United States
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  • 103
    Publication Date: 2019-11-08
    Description: ISS crew health research indicate risk for immune system degradation for long duration missions, necessitating the need to maximize countermeasures on microbial growth (1). This project will investigate applications using violet (400nm) LEDs to mitigate growth of bacteria on architectural surfaces. The application is primarily for architectures and surfaces where a higher amount of bacterial growth is expected. The project will build two different types of violet light sources that represent lamp types that could be installed in spacecraft applications. Under a controlled setting, using violet LEDs, the evaluation will test the effectiveness of a glowing work surface using LED Panel verses an LED array overhead lamp. The effectiveness of the lighting systems to attenuate bacterial growth will be compared to a control. The results of this study can be used to inform spacecraft system architects on novel ways to improve habitat health, and reduce reliance on manual cleaning methods.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN73574-3
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  • 104
    Publication Date: 2019-11-08
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: GRC-E-DAA-TN74109 , 2019 NASA SLPSRA Fluid Physics Workshop; Oct 16, 2019 - Oct 17, 2019; Cleveland, OH; United States
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  • 105
    Publication Date: 2019-12-07
    Description: The Micro-12 flight experiment was launched on SpaceX-15 and completed during berthing on the International Space Station. The goal of this experiment was to understand the effects of spaceflight and microgravity on the physiology of the model exoelectrogen Shewanella oneidensis MR-1. BioServe Fluid Processing Apparatus (FPA) and Group Activation Pack (GAP) hardware systems were used for both flight and ground control tests. Under spaceflight conditions, extracellular electron transfer (EET) rates were found to be significantly increased on insoluble substrates, while biofilm development appeared to be unchanged under the conditions tested; these processes are critical for microbial-assisted bioelectrochemical systems. Additionally, RNAseq analysis, proteomic profiling, and competitive mutant fitness profiling were performed to gain further understanding of microbial physiology under EET-respiring conditions during spaceflight. Overall, the results of the Micro-12 project support the idea that Shewanella oneidensis MR-1, in particular, and exoelectrogens in general could be useful chassis organisms for synthetic biology applications using microbial bioelectrochemical systems. These findings will assist bioengineering and synthetic biology development efforts harnessing the unique capabilities of exoelectrogens for life support and in situ resource utilization.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN75761 , Annual Meeting of the American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Nov 20, 2019 - Nov 23, 2019; Denver, CO; United States
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  • 106
    Publication Date: 2019-12-05
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN73253 , MSC-26704-1 , 2019 Johnson Space Center (JSC) Technology Showcase; Oct 31, 2019; Houston, TX; United States
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  • 107
    Publication Date: 2019-11-06
    Description: W and c Any air borne vehicle needs incorporating safety as key parameter of measure, and inclusion of autonomy raises the critical need for safety under autonomous operations. Management of faults and component degradation is key as complexity in autonomous operations grow over the period of time. Therefore, in addition to basic operational requirements, an autonomous electric vehicle should be able to make accurate estimates of its current system health and take the correct decisions to complete its mission successfully. Real-time safety and state-awareness tools are therefore essential for the vehicle to be able to reach its destination in a safe and successful manner. The need for safety assurance and health management capabilities is particularly relevant for aircraft electric propulsion systems, which are relatively new and with limited historical to learn. They are critical systems requiring high power density along with reliability, resilience, efficient management of weight, and operational costs. A model- based fault diagnosis and prognostics approach of complex critical systems can successfully accomplish the safety and state awareness goal for such electric propulsion systems, enabling autonomous decision making capability for safe and efficient operation. To identify critical components in the system a Qualitative Bayesian approach using FMECA is implemented. This requires the assessment of some quantities representing the state of the electric unmanned aerial systems (e-UAS), as well as look-ahead forecasts of such states during the entire flight, presented in form of safety metrics (SM). In-service data and performance data gathered from degraded components sup- ports diagnostic and prognostic methods for these systems, but this data can be difficult to obtain as weight and packaging restrictions reduce redundancy and instrumentation on-board the vehicle. Therefore, an model-based framework should be capable or operating with limited data. In addition to data scarcity, the variability of such complex critical systems re- quires the model-based framework to reason in the presence of uncertainty, such as sensor noise, and modeling imperfections. Quantification of errors and uncertainties in the measured states and quantities is therefore a fundamental step for a precise estimation of such SMs; un-modeled uncertainty may result in erroneous state assessment and un- reliable predictions of future states of e-UAVs. Typical, centralized model-based schemes suffer from inherent disadvantages such as computational complexity, single point of failure, and scalability issues, and therefore may fail in such a complex scenario. This paper presents a methodology for developing a system level diagnostics and prognostics approach using a Qualitative Bayesian FMECA approach along with a formal uncertainty management framework for an e-UAS. In this work we demonstrate the efficacy of the framework to predict effects of sub-system level degradation on vehicle operation incorporating uncertainty management to predict future behavior under different operating conditions.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN72593-1 , Electric Aircraft Technical Symposium; Aug 21, 2019 - Aug 23, 2019; Indianpolis, IN; United States
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  • 108
    Publication Date: 2019-09-11
    Description: A major stressor in the space environment is microgravity. Microgravity has profound effects on biological processes that are vital to normal functioning. This is most prevalently seen in microorganisms, which have altered growth rates and increased antibiotic susceptibility in microgravity. This is a concern for both astronauts and plants onboard spacecraft. Pantoea agglomerans is a soil bacterium that has been shown to be a plant growth promoter, plant pathogen, and an opportunistic pathogen to immunocompromised patients. Using the ground based microgravity analog, the Rotary Cell Culture System along with the High Aspect-Ratio Vessel, we analyzed the growth and the antibiotic susceptibility of Pantoea agglomerans grown in simulated microgravity. In certain parameters, we discovered an increased growth rate and no change in the antibiotic susceptibility. We found that there were differences in results when certain aspects of the protocol were altered. Further work will need to be conducted to get a better understanding of the changes in the microorganisms exposed to microgravity.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN72298
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  • 109
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Abstract: Current information on the potential distribution and condition of peatland soils are of great importance. This applies notably for actions with respect to climate and environmental protection. The Ministry of infrastructure and agriculture in the federal state of Brandenburg (MIL) therefore initiated a project to provide a complete and updated map of peatland soils for the federal state of Brandenburg, Germany, for the year 2013. Extensive legacy data on both, areal extent of peatland soils as well as soil profile information where made digitally available in a homogeneous map and a consistent database. Approximately 7.725 sites were randomly selected from legacy soil data and currently reinvestigated to draw inference on the current condition of peatland soils. Statistically derived peatland subsidence rates at grassland sites of 0.50 cm/yr and 0.57 cm/yr at arable sites fit well with published values in comparable regions of central Europe. Our results prove the great dynamics of soil development on agriculturally used peatlands. Concerning Brandenburg, the area of peatland soils decreased from 270.000 ha in the early 20th century (Prussian geological map) to actually 163.000 ha.
    Description: Zusammenfassung: Aktuelle Informationen zur Verbreitung und zum Zustand der Moorböden sind vor dem Hintergrund der geplanten Einführung von Agrarumwelt- und Klimamaßnahmen in der Landwirtschaft von besonderer Bedeutung. Das Ministerium für Infrastruktur und Landwirtschaft des Landes Brandenburg (MIL) hat hierzu das Projekt „Schaffung einer Datengrundlage für die Ableitung von Agrarumwelt- und Klimamaßnahmen auf Moorstandorten in Brandenburg“ initiiert. Mit dem Ziel der Bereitstellung einer auf das Jahr 2013 bezogenen Moorkarte wurden umfangreiche, bis dato nicht genutzte Datenbestände zur Verbreitung von Moorböden in Brandenburg zu einer überschneidungsfreien Karte und umfassenden Datenbank moorbodenkundlicher Bodenprofile verarbeitet. Um den aktuellen Zustand der Moorböden zu erfassen, wurden flächenrepräsentativ und zufällig an 7.725 Standorten mit ausreichender Datenbasis erneut bodenkundliche Erhebungen durchgeführt und statistisch ausgewertet. Im Ergebnis konnten Mächtigkeitsverlustraten für landwirtschaftlich genutzte Moorstandorte in Brandenburg abgeleitet werden. Für flachgründige Niedermoorstandorte unter Grünland liegen sie bei 0,50 cm/a, vergleichbare ackerbaulich genutzte Standorte liegen mit 0,57 cm/a darüber. Dies deckt sich gut mit publizierten Werten an vergleichbaren Standorten in Zentraleuropa. Die Fläche der Moorböden in Brandenburg hat sich von Anfang des 20. Jahrhunderts von 270.000 ha, ausgewiesen auf Basis der Preußisch geologisch-agronomische Karte (PGK), auf heute noch 163.000 ha reduziert.
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen, DGMT
    Description: research
    Keywords: 553.21 ; Moor ; peatland ; Brandenburg ; Deutschland ; Germany ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 110
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Abstract: Peatlands are intensively exchanging greenhouse gases with the free atmosphere. Natural peatlands, mires, sequester carbon dioxide as carbon in the peat and emit methane. Peatlands under agriculture or forest are mostly drained and emit carbon dioxide due to peat mineralization and nitrous oxide due to fertilization and nitrogen mineralization. In order to characterize the actual situation and to evaluate measures for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions measured values on gas exchange are needed. Within two national projects direct measurements of the greenhouse gas exchange have been conducted on a wide range of sites, covering different peatland types, land use forms and hydrological situations and using a standardized methodology. Between 2007 and 2012 22 sites have been studied in Lower Saxony over at least two years using the closed cover method. An overview on sites and results is given. Moreover, approaches to estimate the greenhouse gas emissions due to peat excavation and horticultural peat use are presented. Own emission factors and data from literature are used to estimate the contribution of peatlands and peat use to the greenhouse gas emissions of Lower Saxony. Finally measures for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions are discussed and estimates on reduction costs are given from examples.
    Description: Zusammenfassung: Moore stehen in einem intensiven Gasaustausch mit der Atmosphäre. Natürliche Moore haben über Jahrtausende Kohlendioxid aufgenommen und den Kohlenstoff als Torf gespeichert. Dabei haben sie Methan abgegeben. Entwässerte und genutzte Moore setzen den Kohlenstoff als Kohlendioxid wieder frei und emittieren zudem klimarelevantes Lachgas als Ergebnis der Stickstoffdüngung und der Torfmineralisation. Zur Charakterisierung der Ist-Situation und zur Beurteilung von Maßnahmen ist es erforderlich, belastbare Daten über die Treibhausgasemissionen der Moore zu haben. Im Rahmen von zwei bundesweit angelegten Verbundvorhaben wurden an einer Vielzahl von Standorten unterschiedlichen Moortyps, unterschiedlicher Nutzung und unterschiedlicher Klima- und Wasserregime mit einer abgestimmten Methodik die Flüsse der wesentlichen Treibhausgase direkt gemessen. Im Rahmen dieser Verbundvorhaben wurden in Niedersachsen zwischen 2007 und 2012 an 22 Standorten mindestens zweijährige Messungen mit der Haubentechnik vorgenommen. Dieser Beitrag gibt einen Überblick über untersuchte Standorte und Messergebnisse. Darüber hinaus werden Ansätze zur Ermittlung der Treibhausgasemissionen aus der industriellen Torfgewinnung dargestellt. Unter Verwendung eigener Ergebnisse und von Literaturdaten wird eine Abschätzung der Treibhausgasemissionen aus Moor und Torfgewinnung für das Land Niedersachsen vorgenommen. Abschließend geht der Beitrag auf Maßnahmen zur Verminderung der Treibhausgasemissionen aus Mooren sowie beispielhaft auf Emissionsminderungskosten ein.
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen, DGMT
    Description: research
    Keywords: 553.21 ; Moor ; mire ; peatland ; emission ; CO2 ; N2O ; Germany ; Deutschland ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
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  • 111
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    Unknown
    Inst. für Phys. Geogr., Freie Univ., Berlin
    In:  Herausgeberexemplar (FU Berlin) | ZB 20559:36
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: STÄBLEIN, G.: Regionale Geomorphologie ; KERTESZ, A.: Geomorphologische Kartierung in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und in Ungarn. Ein Vergleich der Methodik ; BOLLMANN, I.: Geomorphologische Daten und kartographische Darstellung ; PACHUR, H.-J. & RÖPER, H.-P.: Geolimnologische Befunde des Berliner Raumes ; REMMELE, G.: Holozäne Morphodynamik an Schichtstufenhängen — Untersuchungen in Nordwest-Irland ; MÜLLER, MJ. & STRASSER, R.: Holozäne Geomorphodynamik und Landschaftsentwicklung am Ostrand der Trier-Luxemburger Mulde ; KLEBER, A.: Zur jungtertiären Reliefentwicklung im Vorland der südlichen Frankenalb ; HAMANN, C.: Windwurf als Ursache der Bodenbuckelung am Südrand des Tennengebirges, ein Beitrag zur Genese der Buckelwiesen ; ZÖLLER, L.: Neotektonik am Hunsrückrand ; SEPPÄLÄ, M.: Glazialhydrologie des Inlandeises, eine geomorphologische Interpretation der Verhältnisse in Finnland ; JÄKEL, D.: Untersuchungen und Analysen zur Entstehung der Hamada ; GARLEFF, K. & STINGL, H.: Neue Befunde zur jungquartären Vergletscherung in Cuyo und Patagonien ; STINGL, H. & GARLBFF, K.: Tertiäre und pleistozäne Reliefentwicklung an der interozeanischen Wasserscheide in Südpatagonien (Gebiet von Rio Turbio, Argentinien) ; SCHMIDT, K.H.: Nachweis junger Krustenbewegungen auf dem Colorado Plateau, USA ; KUHLE, M.: Zur Geomorphologie Tibets, Bortensander als Kennformen semiarider Vorlandvergletscherung . ; STÄBLEIN, G.: Deutscher Arbeitskreis für Geomorphologie ;
    Description: research
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen, FU Berlin
    Keywords: 550 ; 910.02 ; Geomorphologie ; Kartierung ; Holocene ; Irland ; Hunsrück ; Frankenalb ; Finnland ; Hamada ; Patagonien ; Cuyo ; Colorado ; Tektonik ; Gletscher ; glacier ; Tibet ; Deutschland ; Sahara ; Tibesti ; Darfur ; Sudan ; Libyen ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
    Type: anthology_digi
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  • 112
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Abstract: In addition to the widespread use of peatlands for agricultural purposes, which is also common in other German states, the raised bogs in Lower Saxony are still also used up to the present day for housing, as well as for industrial peat extraction. The Peatland Conservation Programme in Lower Saxony launched in 1981 therefore only covered raised bogs to disentangle the different uses, and to systematise the nature protection activities in raised bogs. The priority areas for the extraction of peat defined in the Federal State Regional Planning Programme are to be rescinded. The new State Development Programme being formulated will not only include the nature conservation of peatlands, but also for the first time, deal with the climate protection afforded by these very important storage areas for carbon. An important aspect in this regard is the incorporation of fens, and the discharge from peatlands into underlying water bodies. The database and the conclusions which contribute to the implementation of climate protection in peatland conservation programmes, will be discussed and compared with the peatland conservation previously implemented pursuant to the Peatland Conservation Programme in Lower Saxony. An overview describes various approaches for peatland and climate protection implemented by private initiatives, nature conservation societies, EU-Life-Projects, contractual nature protection, publicly owned businesses and authorities in Lower Saxony, research projects on alternative uses, and climate certificate trading. These varied instruments are compared to highlight their relative areal effectiveness, and relevance, followed by an estimate of the potential for future peatland and climate protection in Lower Saxony.
    Description: Zusammenfassung: Neben der auch in anderen Bundesländern weit verbreiteten landwirtschaftlichen Nutzung von Mooren werden die niedersächsischen Hochmoore bis heute auch als Siedlungsraum und zur industriellen Torfgewinnung genutzt. Daher umfasste das niedersächsische Moorschutzprogramm von 1981 nur die Hochmoore, um diese verschiedenen Nutzungen zu entflechten und den Naturschutz in Hochmooren zu systematisieren. Die bisher im Landesraumordnungsprogramm ausgewiesenen Vorranggebiete für die Rohstoffgewinnung von Torf sollen gestrichen werden. In ein neu aufzustellendes Landesentwicklungsprogramm soll neben dem Naturschutz von Mooren erstmalig auch der Klimaschutz dieser wichtigen Kohlenstoffspeicher eingehen. Von besonderer Bedeutung sind hierbei die Einbeziehung der Niedermoore und der Stoffaustrag aus Mooren in unterliegende Gewässer. Die Datengrundlagen und Schlussfolgerungen, die zur Implementierung des Klimaschutzes in den Moorschutz beitragen, werden diskutiert und mit dem bisher umgesetzten Moorschutz nach dem niedersächsischen Moorschutzprogramm verglichen. Ein Überblick beschreibt verschiedene Ansätze zum Moor- und Klimaschutz von Privatinitiativen, von Naturschutzverbänden, mit EU-Life-Projekten, im Vertragsnaturschutz, von niedersächsischen Landesbetrieben und Behörden, von Forschungsprojekten zu alternativen Nutzungen und beim Handel mit Klima-Zertifikaten. Diese unterschiedlichen Instrumente werden in ihrer Flächenwirksamkeit und Relevanz in Beziehung gesetzt und das Potenzial für den künftigen Moor- und Klimaschutz in Niedersachsen abgeschätzt.
    Description: DFG, SUB Göttingen, DGMT
    Description: research
    Keywords: 553.21 ; Moor ; peatland ; mire ; nature conservation ; Germany ; Deutschland ; emission ; bog ; Niedersachsen ; FID-GEO-DE-7
    Language: German
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  • 113
    Publication Date: 2018-05-03
    Description: Spaceflight imposes multiple stresses on biological systems resulting in genome-scale adaptations. Understanding these adaptations and their underlying molecular mechanisms is important to clarifying and reducing the risks associated with spaceflight. One such risk is infection by microbes present in spacecraft and their associated systems and inhabitants. This risk is compounded by results suggesting that some microbes may exhibit increased virulence after exposure to spaceflight conditions. The yeast, S. cerevisiae, is a powerful microbial model system, and its response to spaceflight has been studied for decades. However, to date, these studies have utilized common lab strains. Yet studies on trait variation in S. cerevisiae demonstrate that these lab strains are not representative of wild yeast and instead respond to environmental stimuli in an atypical manner. Thus, it is not clear how transferable these results are to the wild S. cerevisiae strains likely to be encountered during spaceflight. To determine if diverse S. cerevisiae strains exhibit a conserved response to simulated microgravity, we will utilize a collection of 100 S. cerevisiae strains isolated from clinical, environmental and industrial settings. We will place selected S. cerevisiae strains in simulated microgravity using a high-aspect rotating vessel (HARV) and document their transcriptional response by RNA-sequencing and quantify similarities and differences between strains. Our research will have a strong impact on the understanding of how genetic diversity of microorganisms effects their response to spaceflight, and will serve as a platform for further studies.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN51808 , Posters on the Hill 2018; 17-18 Apr. 2018; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 114
    Publication Date: 2019-08-03
    Description: Alabama is one of the most biodiverse states in the United States and has the greatest diversity of aquatic species. As urbanization continues to increase in Alabama, this biodiversity is at risk. This project partnered with the Land Trust of North Alabama to identify sensitive habitats that are at risk for urbanization within Madison and Limestone counties. The Land Trust of North Alabama works to preserve land, primarily in Madison and Limestone counties of North Alabama, and encourages stewardship through environmental education. The team conducted a supervised classification of land class types utilizing data from Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper (TM), Landsat 8 Operational Land Imager (OLI), and Shuttle Radar Topography Mission Version 4 (SRTM) to identify land cover changes and areas most vulnerable to future urbanization. Through incorporating land classification analysis and additional parameters indicative of urbanization, the team produced an urbanization prediction tool and a landscape fragmentation map. The urban prediction tool identified land highly suitable for development and found that, by 2045, 25% of highly suitable land will be urbanized using the measured 1% growth rate. Ecological impact was established using observation data of species of interest to the project partners. These tools will enable the Land Trust to target high risk areas of land for preservation.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: NF1676L-29405 , Perpetua; 2; 2; 1-8
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  • 115
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: Biocene is the period of new life. When our descendants look back at this period in time, they will see evidence, in the geologic and electronic record, of anthropic climate change, growing population, and scarcity of resources. But they will also see the rebirth of human ingenuity as we overcame the challenges that faced us through nature-inspired exploration. The Periodic Table of Life (PeTaL) is a proposed tool and open source framework that uses artificial intelligence to aid in the systematic inquiry of biology for its application to human systems. This presentation defines the PeTaL concept and workflow. Biomimicry, biophysics, biomimetics, bionics and numerous other terms refer to the use of biology and biological principles to inform practices in other disciplines. For the most part, the domain of inquiry in these fields have been confined to extant biological models with the proponents of biomimicry often citing the evolutionary success of extant organisms relative to extinct ones. The primary objective of this paper is to expand the domain of inquiry for human processes that seek to model those that are, were or could be found in nature with examples that relate to the field of aerospace and to spur development of tools that can work together to accelerate the use of artificial intelligence in problem solving. Specifically specialized fields such as paleomimesis, anthropomimesis and physioteleology are proposed in conjunction with artificial evolution. Blockchain technology may be vital in allowing open source design tools such as PeTaL to democratize design and yet protect intellectual property. The overarching philosophy outlined here can be thought of as physiomimetics, a holistic and systematic way of learning from natural history. The backbone of PeTaL integrates an unstructured database with an ontological model consisting of function, morphology, environment, state of matter and ecosystem. Tools include text classification, thesaurus, data visualization, and analysis. Applications of PeTaL include guiding human space exploration, understanding human and geological history, and discovering new or extinct life.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: GRC-E-DAA-TN62244 , Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI) Fall Symposium Series; Oct 18, 2018 - Oct 20, 2018; Arlington, VA; United States
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  • 116
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Humanity is currently on the precipice of a new era: one where human civilization is no longer bound to the confines of a single planet. Now, organizations like the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) have extended their areas of research and are beginning to focus not just on getting humans into space, but also to keep them safe, healthy, and sane. This focus falls under the Human Research Program (HRP). A focus of this program is "dedicated to discovering the best methods and technologies to support safe, productive human space travel" [1]. For "safe and productive space travel" to occur, astronauts must have proper nutrition [1]. While sending up large amounts of dried and packaged food with every shuttle might work fairly well in the short term, when only a few people need to be fed, it will not be sustainable, especially as NASA looks toward longer space journeys beyond the Earth's orbit. Research into this area falls under Advanced Life Support (ALS), whose mission is to develop regenerative life support systems to support future NASA long-duration missions [2]. This would involve growing crops in space to supplement astronaut diets [2]. An important, yet often overlooked, part of growing crops in any environment is the microbial organisms that inhabit the plants' microbiomes. The Seed Microbiome Project aims to investigate the microbial presence throughout the life stages of three crops, Mizuna Mustard, 'Outredgeous' Red Romaine Lettuce, and 'Red Robin' Tomato, that have either been or will be grown on the ISS.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN58238
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  • 117
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The International Life Sciences Research Announcement (ILSRA) is a grant which focuses on 'Pick and Eat' salad-crop productivity, nutritional value, and acceptability to supplement the International Space Station (ISS) food system. My contributions into this project were to 1) manage the Veggie chambers to maintain optimal plant growth and attend to any plant needs, 2) analyze data for the VEG-04 Science Verification Test to create a water delivery schedule for the astronauts aboard the ISS, and 3) assume the role as a VEG-04 Experiment Verification Test (EVT) 'pseudonaut' to confirm that all schedules and flight procedures produce quality results. The VEG-04 EVT will continue up until the last day of my internship. Additionally, I'm currently working on two independent research projects, both of which provide insight to potential plant growth hardware options for lunar or Martian surfaces. One of which is a cable culture hydroponics system (favorable in areas with highly limited space), and the other are two aeroponic systems (a subset of hydroponics which uses no media and misting as its delivery for water and nutrients). All independent projects are still being tested and therefore results are not yet established. Lastly, I have been in charge of maintaining the AeroGarden (Registered Trademark), a hydroponic-aeroponic hybrid system which is currently being investigated as a concept to the potential for minimizing human involvement in the process of growing plants. This has the potential to play a major role in future technological project designs for spaceflight hardware. This system is an ongoing project that will continue once my internship ends.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN53917
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  • 118
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Currently, the goal of plant growth research at KSC (Kennedy Space Center) is to provide a sustainable source of healthy food on long-duration space flights so astronauts and future residents of Mars can get the nutrition they need and produce food, recycle the atmosphere, and aid in recycling water. The sustainable production of food will aid in the efforts of closed life support. Plants have a vital application for bioregenerative life support as demands for food and oxygen can be provided through photosynthesis, while the carbon dioxide from human respiration is removed. In order for a growing medium to provide for plant growth, it needs to provide support, oxygen, ions, and liquid to the plant. This summer research determines how amended Martian regolith simulant acts as a growing medium for plants through looking at the structural properties of each amendment. Mars is covered with regolith which is crushed volcanic rock that is composed of a high amount of perchlorate salts. The composition of Martian soil is such that it is roughly basaltic and consists of sulfur, nitrates, and oxychlorine species. Martian regolith simulants have been generated to further analyze plant growth and aim to replicate features of the reference sample. The JSC (Johnson Space Center) Mars-1A regolith simulant resembles Martian regolith at the Viking I landing site. The objectives of the research this summer at Kennedy Space Center are to devise a plant growth in amended JSC Mars-1A Martian regolith simulant and perform crop studies to assess the performance of full duration crop growth in amended Martian regolith simulant. This research will provide a deeper understanding of how the combination of soil amendments to Martian regolith has a synergistic effect on improving crop production The plant growth experiment will be completed with three treatments each containing inorganic and organic soil amendments.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN58241
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  • 119
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: The Life Sciences Glovebox (LSG) is a rack-level payload facility designed to house biological investigations in a "workbench" type environment aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The facility is scheduled to be launched in September 2018 and will be installed in the Japanese Experiment Module (JEM) of the ISS. LSG is comprised of an extendable work volume, an airlock, an avionics package, a laptop, and supporting structure. The 450L work volume provides two levels of containment for investigations via the physical barrier of its structure and an internal, filtered airflow that results in a negative pressure relative to ISS cabin pressure. The facility provides many other resources for investigation use including 28 VDC power, 120 VAC power, heat rejection, data connections, and video. Portions of the interior surfaces of the work volume are ferrous, allowing investigations and supporting hardware to be magnetically affixed to these surfaces. A UV decontamination system and a variety of ancillary hardware are available for investigations to use while occupying LSG. An engineering unit on the ground is used for payload development and integrated verification testing. Once the facility is installed and commissioned, it will be managed by the same team that manages the Microgravity Science Glovebox (MSG), another rack-level payload facility that has been operating aboard the ISS since 2002. Experienced Investigation Payload Integration Managers (IPIMs), who also support MSG payloads, will be available to assist payload developers through the integration process. This presentation will provide an overview of the LSG facility and the planned investigation flow for the near future.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: M18-6820 , American Society of Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR) 2018; Oct 31, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 120
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: In the subalpine zone of the Rocky Mountains, climate change is predicted to result in an increase in the frequency and severity of spruce beetle outbreaks. Climate change itself may affect vegetation, potentially leading to changes in species composition. The direct and indirect effects of climate and disturbances on forest composition, biomass, and dynamics open the possibility for non-linear ecosystem responses. Modeling studies allow for the study of the interaction of these effects and their impact on the forest system. University of Virginia Forest Model Enhanced (UVAFME), an individual-based gap model that simulates forest dynamics and characteristics, is updated with a spruce beetle subroutine that calculates the probability for beetle infestation and potential mortalityof each tree on a plot. The updated model is then run with multiple scenarios that combine beetle infestation with current or altered climate at sites across the southern Rocky Mountains. Results show that spruce beetle infestations acted to facilitate competition with invading lower-elevation species, resulting in an increase in the biomass of historically lower elevation species and a further decline in Engelmann spruce biomass than occurred with solely bark beetle disturbance or solely climate change. We also found an initial enhancing effect between spruce beetle infestation and climate change; however, by the end of 100 yr of climate change and potential beetle infestation, climate had a dampening effect on spruce beetle infestation, through loss of host trees. These results are an important step in understanding the possible futures for vegetation of the Rocky Mountains as well as for spruce forests across the western United States and Canada.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN63377 , Ecological Society of America; 9; 10; e02437
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  • 121
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: We have successfully flown the EcAMSat (Escherichia coli Antimicrobial Satellite) free-flyer mission. This was a 6U (six unit - CubeSat) small satellite that autonomously conducted an experiment in low Earth orbit to explore the impact of the space environment on antibiotic resistance in uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) and the role a particular sigma factor plays in the response. After being held in stasis during transport to orbit, two strains - a wildtype UPEC and an isogenic mutant with a deleted gene that encodes a sigma factor - were grown to stationary phase in a fluidic card inside EcAMSat's payload, then incubated with three concentrations of the antibiotic gentamicin. The payload then administered alamarBlue (registered trademark), a redox indicator, into all wells of the fluidic card. The cells were then incubated for 144 hours and metabolic activity was measured optically using the payloads' LED (Light-Emitting Diode) and detector system. Data were then telemetered to the ground and compared to a control experiment conducted in an identical satellite in a lab. The results of this experiment will help us better understand important therapeutic targets for treating bacterial infections on Earth and in space. Such targets are particularly relevant to deep-space and long-duration missions where crew may be more susceptible to infection and treatments for them may work differently.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN58312 , Annual Meeting American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Oct 29, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 122
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    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: The universality of water as the solvent for life is usually justified by its role in supporting the rich organic chemistry. It has been pointed out, however, that even richer synthetic chemistry is possible in other organic solvents. Does it mean that water is not necessary for life? Here, other, essential criteria for solvent for life that have not been sufficiently considered are discussed. In biological systems, complex molecules are not only constantly synthesized but also degraded. Solvent-mediated degradation is essential for regulating cell content, preventing overcrowding and allowing for recycling organic material. Achieving a balance between synthetic and degradative processes is facile in water, but not in many other organic liquids. Thus, the so-called water paradox according to which water is both necessary to life and toxic to biopolymer synthesis might not be paradoxical at all. The machinery of life is based on non-covalent interactions that do not involve making or breaking chemical bonds. Their strength needs to be properly tuned. If they are too weak, there might be undesired response to natural fluctuations of physical or chemical parameters. If they are too strong, the kinetics and energetics of cellular processes could adversely influenced. The solvent must allow for balancing these interactions, which provides strong, universal constraints on the medium for life. Water influences non-covalent interactions mainly by two mechanisms. First, it reduces strong, electrostatic interactions between molecules, chemical groups or atoms carrying electric charge or dipole. Second, it induces the hydrophobic effect, the tendency to remove non-polar (hydrophobic) molecules and groups from direct contact with aqueous solution and, instead, interact with each other. In living systems, the hydrophobic effect is largely responsible for self-organization of molecules to more complex structures, such as aggregation of lipid molecules to form biological membranes and protein folding. Water exists as stable liquid in a large temperature range, and the hydrophobic effects are a consequence of the temperature insensitivity of essential properties of its liquid state. In summary, water accomplishes an amazing feat it reduces strong interactions between dissolved species and simultaneously increases the strength of weak interactions, bringing all of them to the right range. Once we consider not only synthetic capabilities but also other required traits of the solvent for life, no viable alternative to water is currently known.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN60490 , European Astrobiology Network Association Meeting (EANA 2018); Sep 24, 2018 - Sep 28, 2018; Berlin; Germany
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  • 123
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN55759 , Annual Scientific Meeting of the Aerospace Medical Association; May 06, 2018 - May 10, 2018; Dallas, TX; United States
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  • 124
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: Human behavior often consists of a series of distinct activities, each characterized by a unique pattern of interaction with the visual environment. This is true even in a restricted domain, such as a piloting an aircraft, where activities with distinct visual signatures might be things like communicating, navigating, and monitoring. We propose a novel analysis method for gaze-tracking data, to perform blind discovery of these hypothetical activities. The method is in some respects similar to recurrence analysis, but here we compare not individual fixations, but groups of fixations aggregated over a fixed time interval. The duration of this interval is a parameter that we will refer to as delta. We assume that the environment has been divided into a set of N different areas-of-interest (AOIs). For a given interval of time of duration delta, we compute the proportion of time spent fixating each AOI, resulting in an N-dimensional vector. These proportions can be converted to integer counts by multiplying by delta divided by the average fixation duration (another parameter that we fix at 280 milliseconds). We compare different intervals by computing the chi-square statistic. The p-value associated with the statistic is the likelihood of observing the data under the hypothesis that the data in the two intervals were generated by a single process with a single set of probabilities governing the fixation of each AOI. The method has been applied to approximately 100 hours of eye movement data collected from pilots in a high-fidelity B747 flight simulator, and the results have been compared to synthetic data in which the each activity is represented as first-order Markov process with random probabilities assigned to the AOIs. Randomly-generated synthetic activities can require thousands of fixations to be discriminated with statistical significance, while the human data can be clustered using averaging windows of some 10's of seconds, suggesting that the actual activities are much more narrowly focused than random Markov models.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN56764 , Vision Sciences Society Annual Meeting; May 18, 2018 - May 23, 2018; St. Petersburg, FL; United States
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  • 125
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    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: "NASA's GeneLab Project has evolved from being a simple repository that hosts multi-omics datasets generated from spaceflight experiments, to a complete solution for analysis and visualization of spaceflight related omics. We will show how Omics can help elucidate the impact of spaceflight factors (e.g. CO2) on organisms, tissues and cells."
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN61462 , University of Chicago, Genomics Dept, Special Seminar; Sep 25, 2018; Chicago, IL; United States
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  • 126
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: MSFC-E-DAA-TN57521 , RCMRD International Conference; Aug 15, 2018 - Aug 17, 2018; Nairobi; Kenya
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  • 127
    Publication Date: 2019-07-25
    Description: NASA's BioSentinel mission is one of thirteen secondary payloads to be deployed on the Space Launch System Exploration Mission-1 (SLS EM-1). The BioSentinel nanosatellite will be sent into a heliocentric orbit beyond Low Earth Orbit (LEO), to study the effects of deep space radiation on the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Ionizing radiation encountered in deep space can create damaging lesions in DNA, including double strand breaks (DSBs). Budding yeast is suitable as a biological model to study these effects, as it is eukaryotic, and can be desiccated for prolonged periods while retaining viability, thus serving as a robust analog for human cells. On the ground, yeast cells are grown in liquid medium, then loaded into the wells of microfluidic cards and air dried prior to integration into the payload. Once the spacecraft reaches its target heliocentric orbit, a mixture of growth medium and metabolic indicator dye will be pumped into the microwells at specific time points to rehydrate the cells and allow them to grow. A 3-color LED detection system will measure changes in growth and metabolism resulting from ionizing radiation exposure. BioSentinel contains a wild type control strain and a rad51 mutant that is defective for DNA damage repair. In this study, we will determine the optimal amount of time to grow diploid yeast cells in liquid culture before they are desiccated for space flight. After an extended time in stationary phase, they become more tolerant to desiccation due to stress caused by nitrogen starvation. However, excessive exposure can lead to loss of viability and to a heterogeneous cell population due to sporulation. Since viability loss during desiccation poses a risk to mission success, a stress preconditioning process during initial growth may increase long-term cell viability. To determine the growth period that improves desiccation tolerance but allows for retention of uniform radiation sensitivity, we will grow both strains in liquid medium for a varying number of days (4 to 7), desiccate the cells, and then observe changes to cell viability and ionizing radiation sensitivity over time. Supported by the Space Life Sciences Training Program at NASA Ames Research Center.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN57943 , American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR) Conference; Oct 31, 2018 - Nov 03, 2019; Rockville, MD; United States
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  • 128
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN63537 , Conference on Space Biology and Aerospace Medicine with International Participation; Dec 10, 2018 - Dec 12, 2018; Moscow; Russia
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  • 129
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Due to advancements in RNA research, mi (micro) RNAs and other small nucleotide RNAs have become a major research field in biology including spaceflight research. The regulation of RNA transcription and processing by miRNAs makes miRNAs an appealing topic for genetics and molecular research. It has been estimated that over 60% of human gene transcripts are targets of miRNA regulation. In fact, this is true for all organisms, including plants and insects. Small nucleotide RNAs can also play a role in regulating gene expression, meaning that gene expression alone is not a complete picture of the potential genetic changes that occur in an organism during spaceflight. The goal of the WetLab-2 project is to isolate and recover miRNAs from various tissue sources on the International Space Station (ISS). No system currently exists that can isolate and recover small nucleotide RNA in space. However, the WetLab-2 system that was validated on the ISS in 2016 can be adapted to fit this purpose. We are currently testing the new modified protocols by running plant and mouse blood experiments in parallel, allowing us to demonstrate the effectiveness of the procedure on different sample types. We expect to be able to optimize and implement the modified miRNA protocols for use on future ISS flights.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN62285 , American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR) 2018 Meeting; Oct 31, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 130
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Long duration missions to deep space will require new approaches for supplying astronauts. In-space microbial manufacturing could generate many important compounds (such as nutrients, pharmaceuticals and fuels) but there are significant barriers to deploying reliable bioproduction platforms to space. These include ensuring adequate production and proper purification of the desired product, especially in the unique radiation and microgravity environment. Here we are focused on developing methods and technologies to feed microbial factories using the resources available in space. CO2, found in abundance in spacecraft cabins and the Mars atmosphere, can be sequestered and converted into bioproducts. While autotrophic organisms can use CO2 directly, they are generally slow growing and have less-developed biotechnology toolkits. Therefore we are developing an alternative paradigm in which CO2 is first reduced to more energetic carbon compounds that can support more rapid growth of workhorse biotechnology platforms (E. coli, S. cerevisiae, P. pastoris).Various technologies exist or are being developed to convert CO2. For example, the Sabatier system currently installed on the ISS, reacts CO2 and H2 to generate CH4 and H2O. This methane could be consumed by engineered methanotrophic bacteria. Alternatively, electrochemical systems can convert CO2 into formate (CHO2) which could be consumed by formatotrophic bacteria. In either case, synthetic biology techniques allow these microbes to serve as reprogrammable biofactories capable of producing a vast number or products.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN62367 , American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR) Meeting 2018; Oct 31, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 131
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The International Space Station (ISS) is a semi-closed habitat in low Earth orbit with environmental conditions provided by an advanced life support system that controls temperature and recycles air and most of the potable water. The crew's activities, such as eating, sleeping, hygiene, and laboratory research, are performed in relatively close proximity. Research in the laboratory includes a myriad of experiments, including those with rodents, plants, and pathogenic microorganisms. Despite these conditions, in-flight monitoring of ISS indicates that the microbial diversity is similar to homes on earth. Accordingly, the crew is generally very healthy, however infectious disease does occur and potential routes of infection by obligate and opportunistic pathogens cannot be completely prevented. Determining the extent of this risk is further complicated, as microorganisms can alter their characteristics in response to spaceflight culture, as exemplified by the increase in virulence of the enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica Typhimurium during spaceflight compared to otherwise identical cultures grown on Earth. Taken together, these factors suggest a need for continued microbiological monitoring and research to understand and mitigate the risk of infectious disease during long duration missions.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN58401 , Gordon Research Conference on the Microbiology of the Built Environment; Jul 15, 2018 - Jul 20, 2018; Biddeford, ME; United States
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  • 132
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Sandy gaps in the shrub matrix of oak (Quercus L.)-saw palmetto (Serenoa repens (W. Bartram) Small) scrub are created by fire but typically close quickly because of rapid regrowth. Such gaps are important habitat features for rare scrub flora and fauna and appear to have been more common in the historical landscape. We followed, from 1993 to 2016, the dynamics of 12 gaps (32.2-98.1 sq m) created by burning slash piles as part of restoration of long-unburned scrub. Gaps closed slowly, primarily by canopy spread of oaks around the gaps. In the absence of subsequent fire, gaps closed within approximately 12 yr. When burned a second or third time, gap area increased to near the initial after-burn size but then declined in area more rapidly than after the initial fire. Vegetation that reestablished in gaps differed from that of the scrub matrix in having less cover of scrub oaks, less cover of S. repens. 〉 0.5 m, greater cover of native shrubs and forbs. 〉 0.5 m, and more bare ground. Soil heating from slash-pile burning killed the roots and rhizomes from which scrub oaks, Serenoa, and ericaceous shrubs sprout; this altered and slowed the after-fire recovery.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN60492 , Journal of the Torrey Botanical Society (ISSN 1095-5674) (e-ISSN 1940-0616); 145; 3; 250-262
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  • 133
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Growth of fresh, nutritious, palatable produce for crew consumption during spaceflight may provide health-promoting, bioavailable nutrients and enhance the dietary experience as we move toward longer-duration missions. Tending plants also may serve as a countermeasure for crew psychological stresses associated with long duration spaceflight. However, requirements to support consistent growth of a variety of high quality, nutritious crops under spaceflight environmental conditions is unknown. This study is exploring the potential to grow plants for food production on the International Space Station (ISS) using the Veggie vegetable production system. Ground testing is underway to compare the impacts of several fertilizer and lighting treatments on growth, quality, and nutritional composition of the leafy green crop mizuna, and the dwarf tomato crop "Red Robin" when subjected to Veggie ISS environmental conditions. Early testing focused on the leafy crop "Tokyo Bekana" Chinese cabbage, but ground tests indicated that this plant suffered from stress responses when grown under LEDs and the chronically elevated CO2 levels found on the ISS. Mizuna, a related leafy variety that grows well in the presence of high CO2, and has excellent organoleptic characteristics, was selected as an alternate crop. Tomato crops have been grown using two fertilizer formulations and two pollination techniques, and growth tests using different red:blue lighting environments are underway. Chemical analysis is also being conducted and these data, when coupled with the growth results, will be used to down-select to the two best lighting treatments and best fertilizer treatment for future testing of each crop on the ISS. Additionally, seed-source testing has become important, with mizuna seeds from two different vendors growing very differently. A seed source has been selected, and seed-surface-sanitizing methods have been confirmed for mizuna, but these remain under development for tomato. A crop-handling protocol is also being evaluated to support food safety. All harvests reserve a subset of samples for microbial analysis to determine baseline microbial levels and help establish critical control points for food safety. Testing was initially conducted in hardware analogs of the standard Veggie plant pillows. However, a new Veggie watering system, the Passive Orbital Nutrient Delivery System or PONDS, has been designed and is being prepared for future flight experiments. With the selection of this growth system, ground tests have shifted to analog PONDS systems. Crop tests on ISS, designated VEG-04 for mizuna and VEG-05 for tomato, are planned in 2018 to evaluate any additional impacts of spaceflight on the light and fertilizer conditions down-selected from ground tests. A set of Veggie-specific questions has been developed to characterize the psychological impacts of plant growth and plant-care activities during spaceflight. Organoleptic questionnaires have been developed to assess produce attributes in microgravity taste sessions. These tests for plants growing in the Veggie hardware on ISS will help to mitigate the risk of an inadequate food supply for long duration missions by developing methods and determining hardware requirements to integrate fresh vegetables as a dietary supplement. This research was co-funded by the Human Research Program and Space Biology (MTL#1075) in the ILSRA 2015 NRA call.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN51707 , NASA Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop (HRP IWS 2018); Jan 22, 2018 - Jan 25, 2018; Galveston, TX; United States
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  • 134
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Long duration missions will require astronauts to subsist on a closed food system for at least three years. Resupply will not be an option, and the food supply will be older at the time of consumption and more static in variety than previous missions. The space food variety requirements that will both supply nutrition and support continued interest in adequate consumption for a mission of this duration is unknown. Limited food variety of past space programs (Gemini, Apollo, International Space Station) as well as in military operations resulted in monotony, food aversion, and weight loss despite relatively short mission durations of a few days up to several months. In this study, food consumption data from 10 crew members on 3-6-month International Space Station missions was assessed to determine what percentage of the existing food variety was used by crew members, if the food choices correlated to the amount of time in orbit, and whether commonalities in food selections existed across crew members. Complete mission diet logs were recorded on ISS flights from 2008 - 2014, a period in which space food menu variety was consistent, but the food system underwent an extensive reformulation to reduce sodium content. Food consumption data was correlated to the Food on Orbit by Week logs, archived Data Usage Charts, and a food list categorization table using TRIFACTA software and queries in a SQL SERVER 2012 database.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-CN-40590 , 2018 NASA Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop; Jan 22, 2018 - Jan 25, 2018; Galveston, TX; United States
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  • 135
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: While it has been shown that decades of astronauts and cosmonauts suffer from immune disorders both during and after spaceflight, the underlying causes are still poorly understood, due in part to the fact that there are so many variables to consider when investigating the human immune system in a complex environment. Invertebrates have become popular models for studying human disease because they are cheap, highly amenable to experimental manipulation, and have innate immune systems with a high genetic similarity to humans. Fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) have been shown to experience a dramatic shift in immune gene expression following spaceflight, but are still able to fight off infections when exposed to bacteria. Furthermore, a recent spaceflight mission showed that flies are more susceptible to infection following exposure to microgravity conditions, compared to ground-reared flies from the same population. Additionally, the common bacterial pathogen Serratia marcescens was shown to become more lethal to fruit flies (both space- and ground-reared) after being cultured in space, suggesting that not only do we need to consider host changes in susceptibility, but also changes in the pathogen itself after spaceflight conditions. Being able to simulate spaceflight conditions in a controlled environment on the ground gives us the ability to not only evaluate the effects of microgravity on the host immune system, but also how the microorganisms that cause immune disorders are being affected by these drastic environmental shifts. In this study, I use both spaceflight and ground-based (simulated microgravity) environments to examine the genetic changes associated with increased S. marcescens virulence in order to understand how microgravity is affecting this pathogen, as well as to evaluate how these genetic changes influence and interact with the host immune system. This study will provide us with more directed approaches to studying the effects of spaceflight on human beings, with the ultimate goal of being able to ameliorate human immune dysfunction in future space exploration.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN57604 , Annual Meeting American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Oct 29, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 136
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Extended exposure to radiation and microgravity in space has been linked to astronauts developing chronic diseases upon returning to Earth. The Gram-negative pathogen Serratia marcescens has been shown to potentially cause significant infections in humans and in insect models on Earth. Our recent findings also showed that S. marcescens shows an increase in virulence after a short period of growth in the spaceflight environment, which raises initiatives to find the correlation between space environment and the increased virulence. Because we know that the health of astronauts is immunocompromised in space, it is possible that the combination of increased bacterial virulence and the weakened immune system will cause astronauts to be more susceptible to chronic diseases in extended spaceflight. With 75% of human disease genes being conserved in the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, these insects act as an ideal model organism to study the human immune system. The high accessibility, low cost, high rate of reproductivity, and short lifespans of D. melanogaster facilitate efficient, high-quality research that seeks to understand altered virulence of this opportunistic pathogen. In this ground-based study, we will use a rotating wall vessel apparatus to simulate microgravity and determine how pathogenicity changes by evaluating differences in gene expression for S. marcescens between bacteria grown in simulated microgravity conditions and controls. We will compare the results of our findings to gene expression patterns in actual spaceflight samples of S. marcescens grown on the ISS (International Space Station) during a recent validation mission, to see if there are common mechanisms across our simulated microgravity and actual spaceflight microgravity samples that both show increased virulence in the fruit fly. With extended space travel in the foreseeable future, understanding how human physiology will be affected by these different factors will help mitigate risks and deaths.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN57969 , Annual Meeting American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Oct 29, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 137
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN58868 , COSPAR Scientific Assembly 2018; Jul 14, 2018 - Jul 22, 2018; Pasadena, CA; United States
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  • 138
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A fully automated plant growth facility for conducting plant research supporting space biology and food production projects on the ISS.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN59364 , International Space Station Research & Development (ISSR&D) Conference; Jul 23, 2018 - Jul 26, 2018; San Fransico, CA; United States
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  • 139
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The oxygenic photosynthetic bacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 (S6803) is a model cyanobacterium widely used for fundamental research and biotechnology applications. Due to its polyploidy, existing methods for genome engineering of S6803 require multiple rounds of selection to modify all genome copies, which is time consuming and inefficient. In this study, we engineered the Cas9 tool for onestep, segregationfree genome engineering. We further used our Cas9 tool to delete three of seven S6803 native plasmids. Our results show that all three smallsize native plasmids, but not the largesize native plasmids, can be deleted with this tool. To further facilitate heterologous gene expression in S6803, a shuttle vector based on the native plasmid pCC5.2 was created. The shuttle vector can be introduced into Cas9containing S6803 in one step without requiring segregation and can be stably maintained without antibiotic pressure for at least 30 days. Moreover, genes encoded on the shuttle vector remain functional after 30 days of continuous cultivation without selective pressure. Thus, this study provides a set of new tools for rapid modification of the S6803 genome and for stable expression of heterologous genes, potentially facilitating both fundamental research and biotechnology applications using S6803.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN58636 , Biotechnology and Bioengineering (ISSN 0006-3592) (e-ISSN 1097-0290); 115; 9; 2305-2314
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  • 140
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: NASA's GeneLab Data System is a repository that hosts multi-omics datasets generated by biological experiments flown onboard the International Space Station. Strategies regarding how GeneLab envisions the involvement of the scientific community and the public at large will be discussed, and current and future capabilities of the system will be described. Information describing how scientists can participate in analyzing the current datasets on plants, microbes, invertebrates or mammals will be provided, and initial findings from the current datasets will be discussed during this presentation. Anyone interested in genomics, transcriptomics, epigenomics and proteomics, and systems biology, or who is curious to understand how space modifies living organisms should attend.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN59138 , ARC-E-DAA-TN58966 , ARC-E-DAA-TN52560 , ISS R&D Conference 2018; Jul 23, 2018 - Jul 26, 2018; San Francisco, CA; United States|COSPAR Scientific Assembly 2018; Jul 14, 2018 - Jul 22, 2018; Pasadena, CA; United States
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  • 141
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Planetary protection is defined as: a) the prevention of contamination of extraterrestrial bodies by terrestrial microorganisms, and b) biohazard containment of returned samples from bodies in the Solar System that could harbor life.1 While the majority of interplanetary missions to date have involved robotic exploration, future missions will include human explorers. Current planetary protection requirements do not address the unique challenges associated with human exploration. The purpose of this abstract is to review planetary protection efforts for crewed missions and provide a forward plan for implementing them at the systems level. Article IX of the UN Outer Space Treaty of 1967 provides the definition of planetary protection, outlined above.1 COSPAR holds the international standard in line with this treaty2, while NASA's Planetary Protection Policy (NPD 8020.7G) outlines the U.S. implementation of the COSPAR standard. 3;4 NPI 8020.7 groups future human spaceflight planetary protection studies as follows: 1) microbial monitoring, 2) contamination mitigation and control, and 3) environmental effects. Additionally, a NPI 8020.7 outlines a five-step plan for forward work: 1) a literature review, 2) community inputs, 3) completion of recommended studies, 4) developing a draft NPR, and 5) implementation with NASA teams. The literature review was published in 2016.5 Inputs from the community were gathered at the Planetary Protection Knowledge Gaps for Human Extraterrestrial Missions, held in 2015.6 Johnson and Race (2016) outlined notional requirements and prioritized studies needed before final requirements can be produced. This prior work sets the stage for completing the necessary studies and finalizing planetary protection requirements for human spaceflight. We propose a continuation of the systems engineering approach adopted thus far. The challenges associated with the implementation of notional requirements will be quantified in detailed discussions with internal stakeholders. The status and results of high-priority studies that have been completed since 2016 or are ongoing will be incorporated into discussions with stakeholders. In this way, we plan to bridge the gap between the science behind planetary protection and the engineering development that will implement it, allowing finalized planetary protection requirements to be developed for future human space missions.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN57494 , COSPAR Scientific Assembly; Jul 14, 2018 - Jul 22, 2018; Pasadena, CA; United States
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  • 142
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The use of antimicrobials to control microbiological growth in manned spaceflight water-based systems has and will continue to have a unique set of challenges and needs. The challenges are varied, and include antimicrobial effectiveness, crew health and safety, materials compatibility, optimal system functionality, antimicrobial shelf life, means to monitor antimicrobial concentration, and means to re-introduce biocides periodically in the case of depletion. Needs vary from application to application, and include control of pathogens for crew health, control of biofilm formation for optimal system functionality, inhibition and prevention of microbiologically influenced corrosion, optimization of wetted metallic material life, and general living quarter and consumable aesthetics with respect to odor and taste. This paper outlines and discusses the various antimicrobials used in prior and current manned spaceflight water-based applications with focus on pros, cons and lessons learned. Design factors such as minimum inhibitory concentration, minimum lethal concentration, required circulated concentrations, materials selection, means to introduce, means to monitor real-time, and concentration maintenance are discussed. The challenges associated with longer term missions, as well as long-term system dormancy as envisioned for exploration missions, lunar habitats, and a manned Mars mission are outlined with respect to anticipated needs and potential design solutions.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN57473 , International Conference on Environmental Systems; Jul 08, 2018 - Jul 12, 2018; Albuquerque, NM; United States
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  • 143
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: In support of advanced air revitalization technologies to enable human spaceflight beyond low earth orbit, performance studies have been conducted using a liquid amine, Diglycolamine (DGA) between teams at NASA's Johnson Spaceflight Center (JSC) and Ames Research Center (ARC). Liquid amines have been used in regenerable earth-based systems to remove CO2 from industrial systems as well as for closed-environment air revitalization because they can be regenerated at lower temperatures than solid sorbent systems. As an additional advantage to solid sorbent-based systems, liquid sorbents can be cycled between an adsorbing contactor and degassing chamber, thereby reducing system complexity by operation in a continuous loop. In an effort to inform a regeneration system design for micro-gravity applications, ARC has performed a number of tests to characterize the degas mechanics of DGA. In order to accurately measure the amount of CO2 captured or released by the amine, methods such as gravimetric weighing and chemical desorption are reasonable, however the first iteration test setup for a scaled down degas system required analysis on small sample sizes. Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) analysis was experimentally evaluated to analyze CO2 concentration because it can produce measurements with sample sizes on the order of 100's of L. Calibration against chemical desorption showed relatively good correlation and test data showed reasonable adherence to expected trends, however more extensive testing should be conducted to fully validate the usage of FTIR to determine CO2 loading on DGA.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ICES-2018-262 , ARC-E-DAA-TN54241 , International Conference on Environmental Systems; Jul 08, 2018 - Jul 12, 2018; Albuquerque, NM; United States
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  • 144
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Currently no standards or requirements exist for microbial food safety for space grown produce (fresh plant foods). Without standards it is difficult to assess produce handling and sanitization options for the ISS and future exploration missions. We are conducting a literature review of microbial levels on fresh food and then carrying out measurements (microbial counts) of grocery store purchased and controlled environment-grown crops. Testing will include lettuce, mizuna, cherry tomato, pepper, and radish, all candidate crops for pick-and-eat testing on ISS and near term exploration missions. Growth chamber conditions will be set to mimic an ISS or spacecraft environment. Assays will include specific pathogens (Enterobacteriacea, Salmonella sp., and Aspergillus flavus) and total culturable microorganisms using aerobic plate counts, and total yeast and mold counts. Analyses will follow the FDA Bacteriological Analytical Manual methods. The goal of the project is to establish a baseline for expected microbial levels found on fresh plant foods that might be grown on ISS and near term missions, and develop risk assessment and microbial safety recommendations for these types of fresh foods.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN51841 , 2018 NASA Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop; Jan 22, 2018 - Jan 25, 2018; Galveston, TX; United States
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  • 145
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: A newly discovered assemblage of predominantly small tracks from the Cretaceous Patuxent Formation at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center, Maryland, reveals one of the highest track densities and diversities ever reported (~70 tracks, representing at least eight morphotypes from an area of only ~2m(exp 2)). The assemblage is dominated by small mammal tracks including the new ichnotxon Sederipes goddardensis, indicating sitting postures. Small crow-sized theropod trackways, the first from this unit, indicate social trackmakers and suggest slow-paced foraging behavior. Tracks of pterosaurs, and other small vertebrates suggest activity on an organic-rich substrate. Large well-preserved sauropod and nodosaurs tracks indicate the presence of large dinosaurs. The Patuxent Formation together with the recently reported Angolan assemblage comprise the worlds two largest Mesozoic mammal footprint assemblages. The high density of footprint registration at the NASA site indicates special preservational and taphonomic conditions. These include early, penecontemporaneous deposition of siderite in organic rich, reducing wetland settings where even the flesh of body fossils can be mummified. Thus, the track-rich ironstone substrates of the Patuxent Formation, appear to preserve a unique vertebrate ichnofacies, with associated, exceptionally-preserved body fossil remains for which there are currently no other similar examples preserved in the fossil record.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: GSFC-E-DAA-TN52497 , Scientific Reports (e-ISSN 2045-2322); 8; 741
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  • 146
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Florida scrub-jays are a species listed under the Endangered Species Act. The NASA Ecology program has been a partner for conservation, recovery, and translocation across the species range. The objectives of this talk are to update members of the Archie Carr Working Group recovery, conservation, and translocation activities and describe how the Archie Carr National Wildlife Refuge and nearby conservation lands relate to species recovery actions.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN54661 , Archie Carr Working Group Meeting; Mar 18, 2018; Melbourne Beach, FL; United States
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  • 147
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Spaceflight imposes multiple stresses on biological systems resulting in genome-scale adaptations. Understanding these adaptations and their underlying molecular mechanisms is important to clarifying and reducing the risks associated with spaceflight. One such risk is infection by microbes present in spacecraft and their associated systems and inhabitants. This risk is compounded by results suggesting that some microbes may exhibit increased virulence after exposure to spaceflight conditions. The yeast, S. cerevisiae, is a powerful microbial model system, and it's response to spaceflight has been studied for decades. However, to date, these studies have utilized common lab strains. Yet studies on trait variation in S. cerevisiae demonstrate that these lab strains are not representative of wild yeast and instead respond to environmental stimuli in an a typical manner. Thus, it is not clear how transferable these results are to the wild S. cerevisiae strains likely to be encountered during spaceflight. To determine if diverse S. cerevisiae strains exhibit a conserved response to simulated microgravity, we will utilize a collection of 100 S. cerevisiae strains isolated from clinical, environmental and industrial settings. We will place selected S. cerevisiae strains in simulated microgravity using a high-aspect rotating vessel (HARV) and document their transcriptional response by RNA-sequencing and quantify similarities and differences between strains. Our research will have a strong impact on the understanding of how genetic diversity of microorganisms effects their response to spaceflight, and will serve as a platform for further studies.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN51808 , ARC-E-DAA-TN53808 , Posters on the Hill 2018; Apr 17, 2018 - Apr 18, 2018; Washington, DC; United States|Annual Delaware Space Grant Research Symposium; Apr 13, 2018; Dover, NE; United States
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  • 148
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: In space, astronauts are more susceptible to pathogens, viral reactivation and immunosuppression, which poses limits to their health and the mission. Interestingly, during space flight, stress-inducible heat shock proteins (HSP) are robustly induced, and the overexpression of HSPs have been implicated in immune dysregulation, therefore HSPs may be critically involved in regulating immune homeostasis. HSP40/DNAJ1 plays a major role in proper protein translation and folding. Its loss of function has been implicated in susceptibility to microbial infection, while its overexpression has been implicated in autoimmunity, collectively suggesting its complicated, but necessary, role in maintaining immunological function. To determine the role of HSP40 during stress-induced altered gravity conditions, wild-type and Hsp40 mutant Drosophila melanogaster were exposed to ground-based chronic hypergravity conditions, followed by quantitative PCR (qPCR) analysis of immune gene expression. In addition, larval hemocytes were collected to determine the functional output in response to E. coli bioparticle phagocytosis. Preliminary data indicates a required role for Hsp40 in strengthening immune function during stress-induced spaceflight in flies. In short, a critical need to evaluate the relationship between HSPs and immune suppression during space flight is necessary. Since space travel may become available to the general public in the not too distant future, and for the possibility of long-term space missions, a more comprehensive evaluation of the molecules responsible for immune dysfunction observed during space flight is required.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN62413 , Annual Meeting, ASGSR (American Society for Gravitational and Space Research); Oct 29, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 149
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: This payload overview presentation will be presented at the Payload Operations Integration Working Group (POIWG) on October 25th, 2018. It provides a high-level overview of Cell Science-03 operations.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN62292 , Payload Operations Integration Working Group (POIWG); Oct 23, 2018 - Oct 25, 2018; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 150
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: GeneLab as a general tool for the scientific community; Utilizing GeneLab datasets to generate hypothesis and determining potential biological targets against health risks due to long-term space missions; How can OpenTarget be used to discover novel drugs to test as countermeasures that can be utilized by astronauts.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN53494 , BioData West Open Targets Workshop and Hackathon; Mar 12, 2018 - Mar 14, 2018; Moffett Field, CA; United States
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  • 151
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: NASA has flown animals to space as part of trailblazing missions and to understand the biological responses to spaceflight. Mice traveled in the Lunar Module with the Apollo 17 astronauts and now mice are frequent research subjects in LEO on the ISS. The ISS rodent missions have focused on unravelling biological mechanisms, better understanding risks to astronaut health, and testing candidate countermeasures. A critical barrier for longer-duration animal missions is the need for humans-in-the-loop to perform animal husbandry and perform routine tasks during a mission. Using autonomous or telerobotic systems to alleviate some of these tasks would enable longer-duration missions to be performed at the Deep Space Gateway. Rodent missions performed using the Gateway as a platform could address a number of critical risks identified by the Human Research Program (HRP), as well as Space Biology Program questions identified by NRC Decadal Survey on Biological and Physical Sciences in Space, (2011). HRP risk areas of potentially greatest relevance that the Gateway rodent missions can address include those related to visual impairment (VIIP) and radiation risks to central nervous system, cardiovascular disease, as well as countermeasure testing. Space Biology focus areas addressed by the Gateway rodent missions include mechanisms and combinatorial effects of microgravity and radiation. The objectives of the work proposed here are to 1) develop capability for semi-autonomous rodent research in cis-lunar orbit, 2) conduct key experiments for testing countermeasures against low gravity and space radiation. The hardware and operations system developed will enable experiments at least one month in duration, which potentially could be extended to one year in duration. To gain novel insights into the health risks to crew of deep space travel (i.e., exposure to space radiation), results obtained from Gateway flight rodents can be compared to ground control groups and separate groups of mice exposed to simulated Galactic Cosmic Radiation (at the NASA Space Radiation Lab). Results can then be compared to identical experiments conducted on the ISS. Together results from Gateway, ground-based, and ISS rodent experiments will provide novel insight into the effects of space radiation.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN53338 , Deep Space Gateway Concept Science Workshop; Feb 27, 2018 - Mar 01, 2018; Denver, CO; United States
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  • 152
    Publication Date: 2019-07-30
    Description: Clinical exposure to ionizing radiation could put cancer radiotherapy or bone allograft patients at an increased risk of fracture. In these applications, ionizing radiation levels can range from accumulative 50 Gy for radiotherapy cancer treatment, to acute 35,000 Gy for allograft sterilization. Ionizing radiation has been shown to decrease bon equality through reduced strength and post-yield properties and degrade collagen integrity through either increased crosslinks (advanced glycation end products, AGEs)or fragmentation. It is unclear which collagen structural change accounts for reduced strength. The dose-dependent effect of ionizing radiation on mechanical and biochemical properties of whole bones are not well understood, particularly for ex vivo doses ranging from 50 to 35,000 Gy.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN54791 , World Congress of Biomechanics; Jul 08, 2018 - Jul 12, 2018; Dublin; Ireland
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  • 153
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Unloading during spaceflight is known to adversely affect mammalian physiology. Mechanical stimulation is required for repair and regeneration by stem cell lineages to maintain tissue health and mass. CDKN1a/p21 functions as a potent cell cycle arrest molecule and we previously found that CDKN1a/p21 was overexpressed in mouse bone during 15-days of spaceflight on STS-131 and localized to osteoprecursor cells in the femur. Therefore, we hypothesized that altered expression of CDKN1a/p21 leads to an arrest of bone formation during spaceflight in response to altered load. To study CDKN1a/p21 and its role in stem cell-based tissue regeneration, we use a CDKN1a/p21 knockout (KO) mouse to investigate the impact on bone structure, osteoprogenitor proliferation, and mineralized nodule formation. We have shown that bone marrow stem cells isolated from juvenile (11-week-old) and skeletally mature (18-week-old) KO mice have an increased bone formation potential as evidenced by increased proliferation and mineralization rates. In addition, we have shown that juvenile KO mice display significantly increased bone volume fraction (BV/TV) relative to wildtype (WT) mice, but not in skeletally mature KO mice, indicating increased resorption and bone turnover in adult mice. To more closely examine age differences in the KO mouse, we will study a wider spectrum of mice ranging from 4 weeks to 12 months in age. To do this, we will analyze differences in bone morphometric parameters using MicroCT and osteoblastogenesis assays. The pelvis, femur, and tibia are key in distributing weight and we expect to see altered remodeling and stem cell potential with age. In combination with histomorphometry, these results will help elucidate the complex mechanisms underlying bone tissue maintenance and stem cell regeneration.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN57675 , ARC-E-DAA-TN43924 , Annual Meeting American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Oct 29, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 154
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: M18-6922 , Additive Manufacturing for Propulsion Applications; Aug 27, 2018 - Aug 28, 2018; Huntsville, AL; United States|Advanced Materials Panel; Aug 27, 2018 - Aug 28, 2018; Huntsville, AL; United States|Liquid Propulsion Subcommittee (LPS); Aug 27, 2018 - Aug 28, 2018; Huntsville, AL; United States|Technical Interchange Meeting (TIM); Aug 27, 2018 - Aug 28, 2018; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 155
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Goals of Food Production in Space: NASA Human Research Program (HRP) near-term food production systems - supplement key nutrients (Vitamins B1,C, K and potassium) that degrade to inadequate levels on exploration class missions; Study behavioral health aspect - caring for plants and improving the acceptability of the astronaut diet by supplementing it with fresh produce (currently anecdotal); Develop sustainable water delivery technologies - current TRL (Technological Readiness Level) 9 particulate based systems (i.e. used in research conducted in plant growth facilities APH (Advanced Plant Habitat), Veggie, BPS (Biomass Production System), LADA/SVET (Russian space plant chamber systems)) require resupply of bulky consumables and generate waste media.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN59371 , ISS (International Space Station) R & D Conference 2018; Jul 23, 2018 - Jul 26, 2018; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 156
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Long-term spaceflight leads to profound changes in multiple organs systems attributable to unloading and fluid shifts in microgravity. Future space explorations beyond low earth orbit will expose astronauts to space radiation, which may result in additional deficits that are not yet fully understood.The Space Life Sciences Research and Applications Division is hosting a lunch and learn briefing by Dr. Ruth Globus of the Ames Research Center. The topic is how living in space causes changes in the human body that resemble age-related diseases on earth (like osteoporosis), and how we experimentally explore coping responses.modulating the responses of bone to the challenges of spaceflight. This presentation will highlight how knowledge from studies on fundamental bone biology can inform the design of intervention strategies against spaceflight-induced bone loss.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN57851 , Informal Lunch & Learn; Jul 10, 2018; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 157
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN54575 , Payload Operations Integration Working Group Meeting; Apr 24, 2018 - Apr 26, 2018; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 158
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Laboratory strains of mice and rat are widely used to study mammalian responses to stimulus, and both have been studied under a variety of gravity conditions, including space flight. We compared results obtained from exposure to spaceflight and microgravity, hyper gravity via centrifugation, earth gravity, and models of simulated partial gravity (hind-limb unloading and partial weight bearing treatments). We examined the reported changes in survival, body mass, circadian rhythm (body temperature and activity levels), behavior, bone, muscle, immune, cardio-vasculature, vestibular, reproduction and neonate survival, microbiome, and the visual system. Not all categories have published data for both species, some have limited data, and there are variations in experiment design that allow for only relative comparisons to be considered. The data reveal species differences in both the level of gravity required to obtain a response, degree of response, and in temporal expression of responses. Examination of the data across the gravity levels allows consideration of the hypothesis that gravitational responses follow a continuum, and organ specific differences are noted. In summary, we present advantages and caveats of each model system as pertains to gravitational biology research and identify gaps in our knowledge of how these mammals respond to gravity.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN52012 , 2018 NASA Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop (HRP IWS); Jan 22, 2018 - Jan 25, 2018; Galveston, TX; United States
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  • 159
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: The NASA Life Sciences Research Capabilities Team (LSRCT) has been discussing deep space research needs for the last two years. NASA's programs conducting life sciences studies - the Human Research Program, Space Biology, Astrobiology, and Planetary Protection - see the Deep Space Gateway (DSG) as affording enormous opportunities to investigate biological organisms in a unique environment that cannot be replicated in Earth-based laboratories or on Low Earth Orbit science platforms. These investigations may provide in many cases the definitive answers to risks associated with exploration and living outside Earth's protective magnetic field. Unlike Low Earth Orbit or terrestrial locations, the Gateway location will be subjected to the true deep space spectrum and influence of both galactic cosmic and solar particle radiation and thus presents an opportunity to investigate their long-term exposure effects. The question of how a community of biological organisms change over time within the harsh environment of space flight outside of the magnetic field protection can be investigated. The biological response to the absence of Earth's geomagnetic field can be studied for the first time. Will organisms change in new and unique ways under these new conditions? This may be specifically true on investigations of microbial communities. The Gateway provides a platform for microbiology experiments both inside, to improve understanding of interactions between microbes and human habitats, and outside, to improve understanding of microbe-hardware interactions exposed to the space environment.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN50283 , Deep Space Gateway Science Workshop; Feb 27, 2018 - Mar 01, 2018; Denver, CO; United States
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  • 160
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Goals to achieve for GeneLab AWG - GL vision - Review of GeneLab AWG charter Timeline and milestones for 2018 Logistics - Monthly Meeting - Workshop - Internship - ASGSR Introduction of team leads and goals of each group Introduction of all members Q/A Three-tier Client Strategy to Democratize Data Physiological changes, pathway enrichment, differential expression, normalization, processing metadata, reproducibility, Data federation/integration with heterogeneous bioinformatics external databases The GLDS currently serves over 100 omics investigations to the biomedical community via open access. In order to expand the scope of metadata record searches via the GLDS, we designed a metadata warehouse that collects and updates metadata records from external systems housing similar data. To demonstrate the capabilities of federated search and retrieval of these data, we imported metadata records from three open-access data systems into the GLDS metadata warehouse: NCBI's Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO), EBI's PRoteomics IDEntifications (PRIDE) repository, and the Metagenomics Analysis server (MG-RAST). Each of these systems defines metadata for omics data sets differently. One solution to bridge such differences is to employ a common object model (COM) to which each systems' representation of metadata can be mapped. Warehoused metadata records are then transformed at ETL to this single, common representation. Queries generated via the GLDS are then executed against the warehouse, and matching records are shown in the COM representation (Fig. 1). While this approach is relatively straightforward to implement, the volume of the data in the omics domain presents challenges in dealing with latency and currency of records. Furthermore, the lack of a coordinated has been federated data search for and retrieval of these kinds of data across other open-access systems, so that users are able to conduct biological meta-investigations using data from a variety of sources. Such meta-investigations are key to corroborating findings from many kinds of assays and translating them into systems biology knowledge and, eventually, therapeutics.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN52427 , 2018 NASA Human Research Investigators'' Workshop (HRP IWS 2018) Kick Off Meeting; Jan 22, 2018 - Jan 25, 2018; Galveston, TX; United States
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  • 161
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: Prolonged spaceflight causes degeneration of skeletal tissue with incomplete recovery even after return to Earth. We hypothesize that heavy-ion irradiation, a component of Galactic Cosmic Radiation, damages osteoblast progenitors and may contribute to bone loss during long duration space travel beyond the protection of the Earth's magnetosphere. Male, 16 week-old C57BL6/J mice were exposed to high-LET (56-Fe, 600MeV) radiation using either low (5 or 10cGy) or high (50 or 200cGy) doses at the NASA Space Radiation Lab and were euthanized 3-4, 7, or 35 days later. Bone structure was quantified by microcomputed tomography (6.8 m pixel size) and marrow cell redox assessed using membrane permeable, free radical-sensitive fluorogenic dyes. To assess osteoblastogenesis, adherent marrow cells were cultured ex vivo, then mineralized nodule formation quantified by imaging and gene expression analyzed by RT-PCR. Interestingly, 3-4 days post-exposure, fluorogenic dyes that reflect cytoplasmic generation of reactive nitrogen/oxygen species (DAF-FM Diacetate or CM-H2DCFDA) revealed irradiation (50cGy) reduced free radical generation (20-45%) compared to sham-irradiated controls. Alternatively, use of a dye showing relative specificity for mitochondrial superoxide generation (MitoSOX) revealed an 88% increase compared to controls. One week after exposure, reactive oxygen/nitrogen levels remained lower (24%) relative to sham-irradiated controls. After one month, high dose irradiation (200 cGy) caused an 86% decrement in ex vivo nodule formation and a 16-31% decrement in bone volume to total volume and trabecular number (50, 200cGy) compared to controls. High dose irradiation (200cGy) up-regulated expression of a late osteoblast marker (BGLAP) and select genes related to oxidative metabolism (Catalase) and DNA damage repair (Gadd45). In contrast, lower doses (5, 10cGy) did not affect bone structure or ex vivo nodule formation, but did down-regulate iNOS by 0.54-0.58 fold. Thus, both low- and high-doses of heavy-ion irradiation cause time-dependent, adaptive changes in redox state within marrow cells but only high doses (50, 200cGy) inhibit osteoblastogenesis and cause cancellous bone loss. We conclude space radiation has the potential to cause persistent damage to bone marrow-derived stem and progenitor cells for osteoblasts despite adaptive changes in cellular redox state.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN12035 , NASA Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop (HRP 2014); Feb 12, 2014 - Feb 13, 2014; Glaveston, TX; United States
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  • 162
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: During prolonged spaceflight, astronauts are exposed to both microgravity and space radiation and are at risk forincreased skeletal fragility due to bone loss, Evidence from rodent experiments has established that bothmicrogravity and ionizing radiation can cause bone loss due to increasd of bone-resorbing osteoclasts and decreasedin bone-forming osteoblasts, although the underlying molecular mechanisms for these changes are not fullyunderstood. We hypothesized that excess reactive oxidative species (ROS) produced by conditions that simulatedspaceflight alters the tight balance between osteoclast and osteoblast activities, leading to accelerated skeletalremodeling and culminating in loss of mineralized tissue. To begin to explore this hypothesis, we used the mCATmouse model [1]; these transgenic mice over-express the human catalase gene targeted to mitochondria, which arethe major organelle responsible for cellular production of free radicals. Catalase is an anti-oxidant that catalyzes theconversion of the reactive species, hydrogen peroxide (H202), into water and oxygen. This animal model wasselected as it displays extended lifespan, reduced cardiovascular disease and reduced central nervous systemradiosensitivity, consistent with elevated anti-oxidant activity conferred by the transgene. We reasoned that miceoverexpressing catalase the mitochondria of osteoblast and osteoclast lineage cells would be protected from the boneloss caused by simulated spaceflight.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN12031 , NASA Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop (HRP 2014); Feb 12, 2014 - Feb 13, 2014; Glaveston, TX; United States
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  • 163
    Publication Date: 2019-08-13
    Description: An overview some NASA work and interests in controlled environment agriculture, and how this might overlap with interests in the USDA are presented.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN62049 , USDA, DTRA, NASA Meeting; Oct 15, 2018; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 164
    Publication Date: 2019-08-26
    Description: Multistage delivery vehicles are disclosed which include a first stage particle and a second stage particle. The first stage particle is a micro or nanoparticle that contains the second stage particle. The second stage particle includes an active agent, such as a therapeutic agent or an imaging agent. The multistage delivery vehicle allows sequential overcoming or bypassing of biological barriers. The multistage delivery vehicle is administered as a part of a composition that includes a plurality of the vehicles. Methods of making the multistage delivery vehicles are also provided.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
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  • 165
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-10-19
    Description: This presentation will cover the the basic pipelines for transcriptomics and proteomics that the GeneLab Analysis Working Groups (AWGs) have so far determined to be optimal. Basic transcriptomic pipelines will first be presented from primary analysis to higher-order systems analysis. Examples of how the data has been analyzed will be presented. Proteomics pipelines will also be presented compiled from various AWG members. Discussion will be generated from the AWG members to reach a consensus for each omic type.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN55390 , Analysis Working Groups (AWG) Workshop 2018; Apr 23, 2018 - Apr 24, 2018; Orlando, FL; United States
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  • 166
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-09-27
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN62894 , NIH/SLPS Pre-Conference Workshop - ASGSR; Oct 30, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 167
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Cell and animal studies conducted onboard the International Space Station and during the Shuttle program have provided extensive data illustrating bone degenerative responses to mechanical unloading in microgravity. Specifically CDKN1a/p21, an inhibitory modulator of cell cycle progression, is upregulated in osteoprecursor cells of the femur during 15-day spaceflight, suggesting that microgravity can block stem cell-based tissue regenerative process at the level of progenitor proliferation and differentiation. To study a potential role for CDKN1a/p21 in regulating osteogenic mechanosensitivity, we cultured primary bone marrow osteoprogenitor cells from CDKN1a/p21-null (p21-null) and wildtype mice with and without mechanical stimulation, and compared their morphological, proliferative, and in-vitro mineralization responses. Structural cell alterations due to mechanical stimulation were assessed by florescence labeling of f-actin cytoskeleton and focal adhesions. Mechanical stimulation of p21-null cells resulted in more pronounced cytoskeletal alignment with the axis of stretch than for wildtype cells. In addition, p21-null cells subjected to stretch loading also formed significantly more focal adhesions than wildtype cells. Combined these findings suggest that p21-null cells are structurally more responsive to stretch stimulation than the wildtype cells. Because osteoprogenitor cells are well known to respond to mechanical stimulation with increased proliferation, we also tested this response in p21-null cells. Results from those experiments show the proliferative capacity of mechanically stimulated p21-null cells far exceeded that of wildtype controls. Specifically, cell counts from 14, and 21 days post mechanical stimulation, show that p21- null cells to have a 4-fold increase in proliferation compared to wildtype. When the p21-null cell differentiation response to mechanical stimulation was evaluated, the p21-null cultuers elicited more extensive mineralization at earlier assessed timepoints than control cultures. Specifically, Von Kossa staining for mineralized matrix showed that the p21-null cells produced more than twice the mineralized surface area of wildtype cells, and at an earlier 7-day time point in culture. Taken together these results suggest that CDKN1a/p21 normally plays a role in negatively regulating osteoprogenitor proliferation and differentiation responses to mechanostimulation in bone. Findings of CDKN1a/p21's increased expression during spaceflight in microgravity also suggest not only a potential molecular mechanism for arresting regenerative bone growth in space, but potentially also a reduced impact for bone-formation-promoting exercise mechanostimulation. The findings described here constitute a novel role for p21 as a regulator of tissue regeneration in response to mechanical load stimulation, and also suggest a new promising molecular target to promote regenerative health in disuse conditions.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN54617 , International Society of Gravitational Physiology; Jun 17, 2018 - Jun 22, 2018; Noordwijk; Netherlands
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  • 168
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: Over the last several decades important information has been gathered by conducting life science experiments on the Space Shuttle and on the International Space Station. It is now time to leverage that scientific knowledge, as well as aspects of the hardware that have been developed to support the biological model systems, to NASA's next frontier - the Deep Space Gateway. In order to facilitate long duration deep space exploration for humans, it is critical for NASA to understand the effects of long duration, low dose, deep space radiation on biological systems. While carefully controlled ground experiments on Earth-based radiation facilities have provided valuable preliminary information, we still have a significant knowledge gap on the biological responses of organisms to chronic low doses of the highly ionizing particles encountered beyond low Earth orbit. Furthermore, the combined effects of altered gravity and radiation have the potential to cause greater biological changes than either of these parameters alone. Therefore a thorough investigation of the biological effects of a cis-lunar environment will facilitate long term human exploration of deep space.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN50623 , Deep Space Gateway Concept Science Workshop; Feb 27, 2018 - Mar 01, 2018; Denver, CO; United States
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  • 169
    Publication Date: 2019-07-16
    Description: Due to advancements in RNA research, mi (micro) RNAs and other small nucleotide RNAs have become a major research field in biology including spaceflight research. The regulation of RNA transcription and processing by miRNAs makes miRNAs an appealing topic for genetics and molecular research. It has been estimated that over 60% of human gene transcripts are targets of miRNA regulation. In fact, this is true for all organisms, including plants and insects. Small nucleotide RNAs can also play a role in regulating gene expression, meaning that gene expression alone is not a complete picture of the potential genetic changes that occur in an organism during spaceflight. The goal of the WetLab-2 project is to isolate and recover miRNAs from various tissue sources on the International Space Station (ISS). No system currently exists that can isolate and recover small nucleotide RNA in space. However, the WetLab-2 system that was validated on the ISS in 2016 can be adapted to fit this purpose. We are currently testing the new modified protocols by running plant and mouse blood experiments in parallel, allowing us to demonstrate the effectiveness of the procedure on different sample types. We expect to be able to optimize and implement the modified miRNA protocols for use on future ISS flights.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN57942 , The American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR) Meeting; Oct 31, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 170
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The International Space Station (ISS) currently operates on an open-loop water purification and distribution system. This system is only 75% efficient with a 25% water loss that must be resupplied on a quarterly basis through cargo resupply missions (Pickett, M.). This system is not feasible for long-duration spaceflight missions. A closed-loop water purification system aboard the ISS can benefit water reclamation and become the water purification system for long-term space flight. The primary sub-systems integrated within the proposed closed loop system include an anaerobic digestion membrane bioreactor and an algae membrane photobioreactor. The processes mimics the abilities of natural biological systems naturally. The water that flows from the algal membrane photobioreactor is rich in nutrients providing a feed source for plants aboard the ISS or can be further processed for potable water.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN62581
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  • 171
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The International Space Station (ISS) as an integral component for the discovery and development of advanced robotics, materials, communications, medicine, agriculture, and environmental science due to it currently being the world's only microgravity laboratory of its kind. Because the ISS is a contained system with confined quarters, much research has been undertaken to assess and diminish the number of microbiological risks associated with astronauts inhabiting the station for extended periods of time. Notable microbiological risk factors include drinking water, air, and food. As an avenue for both mental/emotional respite and a source of fresh produce for astronauts, a vegetable production system has been employed on the ISS. In order to understand the microbial risks involved with a "pick and eat" vegetable system on the International Space Station (ISS), this study aims to compare microbial differences between sanitized and unsanitized seeds by tracking and identifying seedborne microbes throughout the development of red romaine lettuce (Lactuca sativa)-a plant species that has already been grown on the ISS.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN60681
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  • 172
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Dragline spider silk is among the strongest and toughest bio-based materials, capable of outperforming most synthetic polymers and even some metal alloys.1,2,3,4 These properties have gained spider silk a growing list of potential applications that, coupled with the impracticalities of spider farming, have driven a decades-long effort to produce recombinant spider silk proteins (spidroins) in engineered heterologous hosts.2 However, these efforts have so far been unable to yield synthetic silk fibers with mechanical properties equivalent to natural spider silk, largely due to an inability to stably produce highly repetitive, high molecular weight (MW) spidroins in heterologous hosts.1,5 Here we address these issues by combining synthetic biology techniques with split intein (SI)- mediated ligation for the bioproduction of spidroins with unprecedented MW (556 kDa), containing 192 repeat motifs of the Nephila clavipes MaSp1 dragline spidroin. Fibers spun from these synthetic spidroins display ultimate tensile strength (), modulus (E), extensibility (), and toughness (UT) of 1.03 +/- 0.11 GPa, 13.7 +/- 3.0 GPa, 18 +/- 6%, and 114 +/- 51 MJ/m3, respectively-equivalent to the performance of natural N. clavipes dragline silk.6 This work demonstrates for the first time that microbially produced synthetic silk fibers can match the performance of natural silk fibers by all common metrics (, E, , UT), providing a more dependable source of high-strength fibers to replace natural spider silks for mechanically demanding applications. Furthermore, our biosynthetic platform can be potentially expanded for the assembly and production of other protein-based materials with high MW and repetitive sequences that have so far been impossible to synthesize by genetic means alone.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN58692
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  • 173
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Motivation - To curate and organize expensive spaceflight experiments conducted aboard space stations and maximize the scientific return of investment, while democratizing access to vast amounts of spaceflight related omics data generated from several model organisms. Results - The GeneLab Data System (GLDS) is an open access database containing fully coordinated and curated "omics" (genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics) data, detailed metadata and radiation dosimetry for a variety of model organisms. GLDS is supported by an integrated data system allowing federated search across several public bioinformatics repositories. Archived datasets can be queried using full-text search (e.g., keywords, Boolean and wildcards) and results can be sorted in multifactorial manner using assistive filters. GLDS also provides a collaborative platform built on GenomeSpace for sharing files and analyses with collaborators. It currently houses 172 datasets and supports standard guidelines for submission of datasets, MIAME (for microarray), ENCODE Consortium Guidelines (for RNA-seq) and MIAPE Guidelines (for proteomics).
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN59897
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  • 174
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Traditionally apoptosis and the apoptotic machinery have been deemed as anticarcinogenic because of their presumed roles in eliminating damaged or unwanted cells. However, recent work from our laboratory and others have shown that the established paradigm is deeply flawed. The fundamental flaw is the assumption that apoptosis, once initiated, is irreversible and invariably leads to cell death. However, there is increasing evidence that cells can survive activation of the apoptotic cascade. This new revelation about abortive apoptotic cells can dramatically change our assessment of the biological roles of apoptosis. In this brief review, we will cover some of the original studies that report the "undead" apoptotic cells and how they lead to unexpected new roles for apoptotic factors in space radiation and other stress induced genetic instability and carcinogenesis. We will also review exciting new discoveries on the association among abortive apoptosis, spontaneous DNA double strand breaks, DNA damage response, and stemness of cancer cells.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN55556
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  • 175
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The mission of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is to reach for new heights for the benefit of humankind. In order for space flight to be feasible over further distances and longer durations of time, food must be sustainably produced under the unique conditions of space. Freeze drying, the method commonly used by astronauts for food supply, is not suitable for prolonged space flight because the food loses its nutritional value as time passes. Kennedy Space Centers Utilization and Life Sciences Office (UB-A), under the Exploration Research and Technology Program (UB), conducts research on plant growth and development under International Space Station (ISS) conditions. The New Crop Selection experiments are testing the suitability of leafy crops to ISS conditions. Through this particular experiment, we seek to optimize food production by analyzing the growth responses of leafy greens through the manipulation of CO2 levels.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN58194
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  • 176
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: A combined packing and assembly method that efficiently packs ribonucleic acid (RNA) into virus like particles (VLPs) has been developed. The VLPs can spontaneously assemble and load RNA in vivo, efficiently packaging specifically designed RNAs at high densities and with high purity. In some embodiments the RNA is capable of interference activity, or is a precursor of a RNA capable of causing interference activity. Compositions and methods for the efficient expression, production and purification of VLP-RNAs are provided. VLP-RNAs can be used for the storage of RNA for long periods, and provide the ability to deliver RNA in stable form that is readily taken up by cells.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
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  • 177
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: The present disclosure relates to a composition including an extract from an Acidithiobacillus bacteria or a yeast extracted after exposure of the bacteria to UV radiation. The disclosure further relates to a method of preparing a UV-blocking composition by exposing a culture of Acidithiobacillus or yeast to UV radiation and extracting UV-blocking cellular material produced in response to the UV radiation from the Acidithiobacillus or yeast. The disclosure further relates to a method of protecting an item from UV radiation damage by extracting UV-blocking cellular material from Acidithiobacillus or yeast exposed to UV radiation and covering the item with the UV-blocking cellular material. The disclosure further relates to a UV-resistant yeast cell and a UV-resistant bacterial cell.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
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  • 178
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: In space, astronauts are exposed to environmental stressors that often result in physiological changes. One prominent stressor in spaceflight is microgravity, and research has shown that long term microgravity exposure causes muscle atrophy, bone loss, cardiovascular concerns, and vision impairment. It is critical to understand how altered gravity affects physiology on the cellular, molecular, and gene level in order to accurately assess health risks and to develop effective countermeasures. Ground-based microgravity simulators such as random positioning machines (RPMs) are used to produce some of the biological effects of altered gravity on different cell types and organisms. Real-time imaging during simulations are of particular interest as we can study how basic cell functions such as cell division, cell migration, and proliferation progress under microgravity conditions. However, design limitations of present microgravity simulators such as susceptibility to parasitic vibration and displacement of the sample from the center of rotation challenge the accuracy of experiment results and live images. We have developed a cell culture sample holder module suitable for live microscopic imaging on an RPM. CAD modeling and 3D printing technology were used to implement modifications to the sample holder and to install a digital microscope to perform live bright-field and fluorescent imaging. Vibration damping materials were also investigated to allow for stable imaging while the microgravity simulator was within a cell culture incubator. Novel methods and hardware modifications for improving live cell imaging on ground-based microgravity simulators were proposed and discussed.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN59013
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  • 179
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Vibrissae of Phoca Vitulina (harbor seal) and Mirounga Angustirostris (elephant seal) possess undulations along their length. Harbor seal vibrissae have shown potential to reduce vortex induced vibrations and reduce drag compared to cylinders and ellipses. The exact geometry of the whiskers has not been well documented and the parameters that are responsible for the reduction in drag and vortex induced vibrations have not been characterized. Samples of six harbor seal vibrissae, six elephant seal vibrissae and six California sea lion (Zalophus californianus) vibrissae were collected from the Marine Mammal Center in California. The objectives of this study were to (1) Compare measurement techniques for digitizing and extracting parameters of the seal whiskers for the PeTaL (Periodic Table of Life) database. CT scanning, microscopy and 3D scanning techniques were compared. (2) Compare aerodynamic characteristics of a representative harbor seal whisker, elephant seal whisker, California sea lion whisker and ellipse at Re = 12000 and Re = 23000 based on major axis and free stream velocity. The data (in appendices) is available to compare CFD models or for further experimental validation, (3) Show close up images of whiskers and look for surface roughness effects. Variations in the seven parameters of the seal whisker were observed that may either be a feature of the vibration reduction mechanism or a result of natural variation. It is hypothesized that six parameters are sufficient to characterize seal whiskers based on analytic fitting. The drag coefficient of harbor seal whiskers examined in this study were found to be 25 percent lower than that of an ellipse with comparable major and minor axis lengths at Reynolds number of 12000. The dissipation length scale was found to be larger for seal whiskers. Potential applications of seal whisker morphology for aerospace are discussed. Roughness is not thought to play a factor in seal hydrodynamics.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: NASA/TM-2018-219919 , E-19537 , GRC-E-DAA-TN56453
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  • 180
    Publication Date: 2019-12-12
    Description: One potentially important bone quality characteristic is the response of bone to cyclic (repetitive) mechanical loading. In small animals, such as in rats and mice, cyclic loading experiments are particularly challenging to perform in a precise manner due to the small size of the bones and difficult-to-eliminate machine compliance. Addressing this issue, we developed a precise method for ex vivo cyclic compressive loading of isolated mouse vertebral bodies. The method has three key characteristics: 3D-printed support jigs for machining plano-parallel surfaces of the tiny vertebrae; pivotable loading platens to ensure uniform contact and loading of specimen surfaces; and specimen-specific micro-CT-based finite element analysis to measure stiffness to prescribe force levels that produce the same specified level of strain for all test specimens. To demonstrate utility, we measured fatigue life for three groups (n = 5-6 per group) of L5 vertebrae of C57BL/6J male mice, comparing our new method against two methods commonly used in the literature. We found reduced scatter of the mechanical behavior for this new method compared to the literature methods. In particular, for a controlled level of strain, the standard deviation of the measured fatigue life was up to 5-fold lower for the new method (F-ratio = 4.9; p 〈 0.01). The improved precision for this new method for biomechanical testing of small-animal vertebrae may help elucidate aspects of bone quality.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN63226 , Bone Reports (e-ISSN 2352-1872); 9; 165-172
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  • 181
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: In radiation biology, the ability to predict cancer risk associated with exposure to low doses of high-LET (Linear Energy Transfer) ionizing radiation remains a challenge. Epidemiological methods lack the sensitivity and power to provide detailed risk estimates for cancer and ignore individual sensitivity. We have hypothesized that DNA repair capacity is the primary factor differentiating peoples radiation sensitivity. We previously showed in immortalized human cell lines that characterizing the dose and time dependence of p53-binding protein 1 (53BP1) foci formation in the nucleus following X-rays exposure is sufficient to predict DNA repair response to any other LET in the same cell line. We now tested this hypothesis across a population of mice with different genetic background. Fibroblast cells were extracted and cultivated from 76 individual mice from 15 different strains and exposed to HZE (high (H) atomic number (Z) and energy (E) galactic cosmic ray particles) particles and X-rays. Individual radiation sensitivities were investigated by high throughput measurement of DNA repair kinetics that evaluated 53bp1 foci numbers as a surrogate for DNA double-strand breaks at various times post-irradiation. Instead of just counting foci which can be hard to distinguish for high-LET or high doses, we also took into account the track structure of high-LET particles to compute the remaining number of unrepaired tracks as a function of time post-irradiation. As expected, the percentage of unrepaired track over a 48 hours follow-up period increased with LET. In addition, repair rate was modulated by genetics, with animals from the same strain showing small variance while large rate differences were observed between strains. Radiation strain sensitivity ranking was estimated based on repair rates from exposure to each LET evaluated in this work, and ranking for high-LET correlated better with ranking from high dose of X-ray, not low dose. At the in-vivo level, drops in T-cells and B-cells number measured 24 hours after 0.1 Gy (Gray) X-ray exposure, correlated with slower DNA repair kinetic in fibroblast cells of the same strains of mice. At the genomic level, mouse genome wide association (GWA) analysis identified seven significant genetic loci on chromosomes 2, 3, 7, 10, 11, 13 and 19 with different significance depending on the LET. Interestingly, for the two highest LET, a common locus on Chromosome 10 was identified with high enrichment for DNA repair associated genes.Overall, this work suggests that repair kinetics of primary skin fibroblasts is a good surrogate marker for in-vivo radiation sensitivities in other tissues and that this response is modulated by genetics. Our study also confirms that DNA repair kinetics following high doses of X-ray can be used to predict radiation sensitivity to high-LET.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN47688 , NASA Human Research Program Investigatorsý Workshop (HRP IWS 2018); Jan 22, 2018 - Jan 25, 2018; Galveston, TX; United States
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  • 182
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: As exploration of the solar system advances with life detection missions on the horizon, the concern for planetary protection has grown considerably. When attempting to detect extraterrestrial life, the likelihood of false positives from terrestrial contamination must be minimized. The Exposing Microorganisms in the Stratosphere (E-MIST) balloon project aims to evaluate whether resilient terrestrial bacteria can survive stressors in a Mars-like environment. This is accomplished by sending Bacillus pumilus SAFR-032, an endospore-forming bacterial isolate from a spacecraft assembly facility, to the Earth's middle stratosphere (30-38 kilometers), where low temperature and pressure and high radiation and dryness conditions are similar to the surface of Mars. Previous ground and flight tests showed that the vast majority of SAFR-032 spores (99.99 percent) were inactivated by direct sunlight due to ultraviolet (UV) radiation. This observation led us to explore the role of dust shielding in changing microbial survivorship outcomes. To determine the dust particle distributions and density for potentially shielding microbes from UV radiation, samples of a Martian dust simulant were mixed with SAFR-032 spores. The dry heat sterilized simulant used was JSC MARS-1, weathered volcanic ash from Hawaii that displays many chemical and physical properties similar to the Martian soil as characterized by the Viking Lander 1, including reflectance spectrum, chemical composition, mineralogy, grain size, specific gravity, and magnetic properties. First, scanning electron microscopy was undertaken to visualize the aggregation of the spores with dust particles (i.e., shading effects), and samples of varying dust concentrations were subsequently irradiated with UVC light to test survivorship outcomes. After a relationship between dust concentration and spore survivorship was determined, a solar simulator capable of irradiating samples with a fuller UV spectrum (less than 280-400 nanometers) was used to perform a more robust middle stratosphere simulation. Taken together, we will use results from the ground-based irradiation studies to feed into experimental designs for the next E-MIST ultra-long duration polar balloon flight launched by NASA.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN57978 , Annual Meeting, American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Oct 31, 2018 - Nov 03, 2018; Bethesda, MD; United States
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  • 183
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The purpose of this study is to assess the quality of spaceflight tissues stored in Ames Life Science Data Archive (ALSDA) freezers. Garnering information for downstream functional analysis such as generation of omics datasets from tissues is, in part, dependent on the state of sample preservation. To assess the viability of a select group of tissues, RNA integrity number (RIN) values were calculated for RNA extracted from rodent livers. Rat livers from Spacelab Life Sciences 1 (SLS-1) and mouse livers from Commercial Biomedical Test Module 3 (CBTM-3), Rodent Research 1 (RR1), and Rodent Research 3 (RR3) were tested. It was found that mean RIN values from CBTM3, RR1, and RR3 were suitable for downstream functional analysis (RIN greater than 5) while the mean RIN value for SLS-1 was not (RIN equal to 2.5 plus or minus 0.1). Information from this study could lay the foundation for future efforts in determining the types of assays that are most appropriate for different tissues in ALSDA freezers, which would maximize the scientific return on rare spaceflight samples.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN55906 , International Society for Biological and Environmental Repositories (ISBER) 2018 Annual Meeting & Exhibits; May 20, 2018 - May 24, 2018; Dallas, TX; United States
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  • 184
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    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN56370 , COSPAR WORKSHOP ON: Refining Planetary Protection Requirements for HUMAN MISSIONS; May 15, 2018 - May 16, 2018; Houston, Tx; United States
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  • 185
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The main goal is to ensure that a minimal set of measures is consistently captured from all ISS crewmembers until the end of ISS to characterize the effects of space. The data from these measures will placed in an archive managed by HRP and can be made available to studies via data sharing agreements.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-E-DAA-TN55761 , Science Symposium Event; May 22, 2017 - May 23, 2017; Houston, TX; United States
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  • 186
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: This payload overview presentation will be presented at the Payload Operations Integration Working Group (POIWG) on April 26, 2018. It provides a high-level overview of Cell Science-03 operations.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN55379 , Payload Operations Integration Working Group (POIWG); Apr 26, 2018; Huntsville, Alabama; United States
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  • 187
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN52811 , Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conservation 2018; Feb 18, 2018 - Feb 23, 2018; Kobe; Japan
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  • 188
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) is a United States (US) federal agency that oversees US space exploration and aeronautical research. NASA's primary launch site, Kennedy Space Center (KSC) is located along the east coast of Florida, on Cape Canaveral and the western Atlantic Ocean. The natural environment within KSC's large land boundaries, not only functions as an extensive safety buffer-area, it performs simultaneously as a wildlife refuge and a national seashore. In the early 1960s, NASA was developing KSC for rocket launches and the US was establishing an awareness of, and commitment to protecting the environment. The US began creating regulations that required the consideration of the environment when taking action on federal land or with federal funds. The timing of the US Endangered Species Act (1973), the US National Environmental Policy Act (1972), coincided with the planning and implementation of the US Space Shuttle Program. This resulted in the first efforts to evaluate the impacts of space launch operation operations on waterways, air quality, habitats, and wildlife. The first KSC fauna and flora baseline studies were predominantly performed by University of Central Florida (then Florida Technological University). Numerous species of relative importance were observed and sea turtles were receiving regulatory review and protection as surveys by Dr. L Ehrhart (UCF) from 1973-1978 described turtles nesting along the KSC beaches and foraging in the KSC lagoon systems. These data were used in the first NASA Environmental Impact Statement for the Space Transportation System (shuttle program) in 1980. In 1982, NASA began a long term ecological monitoring program with contracted scientists on site. This included efforts to track sea turtle status and trends at KSC and maintain protective measures for these species. Many studies and collaborations have occurred on KSC over these last 45 years with agencies (USFWS, NOAA, NAVY), students, and universities (UCF, University of Toronto, Texas A&M, UF). This presentation will review the various studies and collaborations on sea turtles at KSC that include: nest distributions and success, stranding network development, aerial survey testing for nest counts, predator control assessments, the earliest baseline blood chemistry health determinations on nesting females, stress hormones in nesting females, multi-year study of hatchling sex ratios, genetics, species composition, abundance and distribution of in-water juveniles, turtle cold stun response, exterior lighting impacts and control, and satellite tag tracking of post-nesting turtles in the vicinity of near shore shoals and sand mining sites. Through these studies, monitoring, and recommendations, KSC has provided excellent stewardship and protection of the local environment. While conducting its space program mission, KSC has also made significant contributions of information for agencies charged with the conservation and management of these species
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN52564 , International Sea Turtle Society Annual Symposium on Sea Turtle Biology and Conversation; Feb 18, 2018 - Feb 23, 2018; Kobe; Japan
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  • 189
    Publication Date: 2019-08-26
    Description: The invention provides a composite of silver nanoparticles decorated with graphene quantum dots (Ag-GQDs) using pulsed laser synthesis. The nanocomposites were functionalized with polyethylene glycol (PEG). A concentration of 150 .mu.g/mL of Ag-GQDs, a non-toxic level for human cells, exhibits strong antibacterial activity against both Gram-Positive and Gram-Negative Bacteria.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
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  • 190
    Publication Date: 2019-10-22
    Description: Traces of life are nearly ubiquitous on Earth. However, a central unresolved question is whether these traces always indicate an active microbial community or whether, in extreme environments, such as hyperarid deserts, they instead reflect just dormant or dead cells. Although microbial biomass and diversity decrease with increasing aridity in the Atacama Desert, we provide multiple lines of evidence for the presence of an at times metabolically active, microbial community in one of the driest places on Earth. We base this observation on four major lines of evidence: (i) a physico-chemical characterization of the soil habitability after an exceptional rain event, (ii) identified biomolecules indicative of potentially active cells [e.g., presence of ATP, phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs), metabolites, and enzymatic activity], (iii) measurements of in situ replication rates of genomes of uncultivated bacteria reconstructed from selected samples, and (iv) microbial community patterns specific to soil parameters and depths. We infer that the microbial populations have undergone selection and adaptation in response to their specific soil microenvironment and in particular to the degree of aridity. Collectively, our results highlight that even the hyperarid Atacama Desert can provide a habitable environment for microorganisms that allows them to become metabolically active following an episodic increase in moisture and that once it decreases, so does the activity of the microbiota. These results have implications for the prospect of life on other planets such as Mars, which has transitioned from an earlier wetter environment to todays extreme hyperaridity.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN53775 , PNAS (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in the United States); 115; 11; 2670-2675
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  • 191
    Publication Date: 2019-05-07
    Description: Responses of animals exposed to microgravity during in-space experiments were observed via available video recording stored in the NASA Ames Life Sciences Data Archive. These documented observations of animal behavior, as well as the range and level of activities during spaceflight, demonstrate that weightlessness conditions and the extreme novelty of the surroundings may exert damaging psychological stresses on the inhabitants. In response to a recognized need for in-flight animals to improve their wellbeing we propose to reduce such stresses by shaping and interrelating structures and surroundings to satisfying vital physiological needs of inhabitants. A Rodent Habitat Hardware System (RHHS) based housing facility incorporating a tubing network system, to maintain and monitor rodent health environment with advanced accessories has been proposed. Placing mice in a tubing-configured environment creates more natural space-restricted nesting environment for rodents, thereby facilitating a more comfortable transition to living in microgravity. A sectional tubing structure of the RHHS environment will be more beneficial under microgravity conditions than the provision of a larger space area that is currently utilized. The new tubing configuration was found suitable for further incorporation of innovative monitoring technology and accessories in the animal holding habitat unit which allow to monitor in real-time monitoring of valuable health related biological parameters under weightlessness environment of spaceflight.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN50007
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  • 192
    Publication Date: 2019-06-08
    Description: A coupling between geomagnetic activity and the human nervous system's function was identified by virtue of continuous monitoring of heart rate variability (HRV) and the time-varying geomagnetic field over a 31-day period in a group of 10 individuals who went about their normal day-to-day lives. A time series correlation analysis identified a response of the group's autonomic nervous systems to various dynamic changes in the solar, cosmic ray, and ambient magnetic field. Correlation coefficients and p values were calculated between the HRV variables and environmental measures during three distinct time periods of environmental activity. There were significant correlations between the group's HRV and solar wind speed, Kp, Ap, solar radio flux, cosmic ray counts, Schumann resonance power, and the total variations in the magnetic field. In addition, the time series data were time synchronized and normalized, after which all circadian rhythms were removed. It was found that the participants' HRV rhythms synchronized across the 31-day period at a period of approximately 2.5 days, even though all participants were in separate locations. Overall, this suggests that daily autonomic nervous system activity not only responds to changes in solar and geomagnetic activity, but is synchronized with the time-varying magnetic fields associated with geomagnetic field-line resonances and Schumann resonances.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN56494 , International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1661-7827) (e-ISSN 1660-4601); 14; 7; 770
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  • 193
    Publication Date: 2019-07-26
    Description: The detrimental effects of mechanical unloading in microgravity, including the musculo-skeletal system, are well documented. However, the effects of mechanical unloading on joint health and the interaction between bone and cartilage specifically, are less well known. Our ongoing studies with the mouse bone model have identified the failure of normal stem cell-based tissue regeneration, in addition to tissue degeneration, as a significant concern for long-duration spaceflight, especially in the mesenchymal and hematopoietic tissue lineages. Furthermore, we have identified the cell cycle arrest molecule, CDKN1ap21, as specifically up-regulated during spaceflight exposure and localized to osteoprecursors on the bone surface and chondroprogenitors in articular cartilage that are both required for normal tissue regeneration. The 30-day BionM1 and 37-day Rodent Research 1 (RR1) missions enabled the possibility of studying these effects in long-duration microgravity experiments. We hypothesized that the inhibition of stem cell-based tissue regeneration in short-duration spaceflight would continue during long-duration spaceflight resulting in significant tissue alterations and we specifically studied the hip joint (pelvis and proximal femur) to elucidate these effects. To test this hypothesis we analyzed bone and bone marrow stem cells using techniques including high-resolution Microcomputed Tomography (MicroCT), in-vivo differentiation and migration assays, and whole transcriptome expression profiling. We found that exposure to spaceflight for 30 days results in a significant decrease in bone volume fraction (-31), trabecular thickness (-14) and trabecular number (-20). Similar decrements in bone volume fraction (-27), trabecular number (-13) and trabecular thickness (-17) were found in female mice exposed to 37 days spaceflight. Furthermore, high-resolution MicroCT and immunohistochemical analysis of spaceflight tissues revealed a severe disruption of the epiphyseal boundary, resulting in endochondral ossification of the femoral head and perforation of articular cartilage by bone. This suggests that spaceflight in microgravity may cause rapid induction of an aging-like phenotype with signs of osteoarthritic disease in the hip joint. Microarray analysis also revealed that the top pathways altered during spaceflight include activation of matrix metalloproteinases, oxidative stress signaling and inflammation in both whole bone tissue and isolated bone marrow stem cells. In conclusion, the observed inhibition of stem cell-based tissue regeneration persists during long-duration spaceflight. Furthermore, spaceflight mice exhibit disruption of the epiphyseal boundary and endochondral ossification of the femoral head, and an inhibition of stem cell based tissue regeneration, which, taken together, may indicate onset of an accelerated aging phenotype with signs of osteoarthritic disease.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN43927 , Annual Meeting American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Oct 25, 2017 - Oct 28, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 194
    Publication Date: 2019-07-26
    Description: Broad tissue degeneration and the failure of normal tissue regenerative processes in microgravity because of mechanical unloading are increasing concerns for sustaining life in space as the duration of future flight missions increases. Work in our laboratory has identified normal adult stem cell-based tissue regenerative processes, such as the formation of new bone, cartilage, and immune cells, as being particularly sensitive to the stresses of mechanical unloading in microgravity. Our studies have also identified the inhibition of differentiation of marrow mesenchymal stem cells and activation of CDKN1ap21-mediated cell cycle arrest in proliferative osteoprecursor cells on the bone surface as potential mechanisms for spaceflight-induced skeletal changes. This finding, in combination with the role of CDKN1ap21 as a suppressor of mammalian tissue regeneration, suggests that this gene could be responsible for suppressing stem cell-based tissue regeneration in response to disuse. In this work, we hypothesized that CDKN1ap21 regulates regenerative bone formation in response to alterations in mechanical load and tested this hypothesis by studying the skeletal phenotype and stem cell regenerative ability of juvenile (4-11 weeks old) and adult (18 weeks-12 months old) p21 (--) knockout (KO) mice. Additionally, we analyzed bone micro-architectural properties, bone formation rates and differentiation capacity of bone marrow stem cells (BMSCs) from male and female KO mice exposed to hindlimb unloading (HU) for 15-30 days. We found that juvenile KO mice exhibited increased femoral trabecular and cortical bone formation, whilst three-point bending of the tibias from KO mice showed decreased bone stiffness. Conversely, adult KO mice exhibited no significant differences in micro-architectural properties compared to WT (wild-type) but woven bone structure was indicative of rapid bone remodeling. Furthermore, cortical bone properties showed similar characteristics to aged bone, including increased cross-sectional area and perimeter, whilst three-point bending showed increased stiffness and toughness. Interestingly, in-vitro, KO mice exhibited increased differentiation and mineralized nodule formation in osteoblastogenesis assays compared to WT. Preliminary results from CDKN1ap21 KO mice subjected to HU suggest altered sensitivity to mechanical unloading resulting in decreased cortical thickness compared to WT mice. However, KO mice subjected to short and long-duration HU show increased in-vitro differentiation potential of BMSCs to from form mature, mineral-forming osteoblasts, indicating maintenance of regenerative potential. Analysis of bone formation rates, cell proliferation rates and key genes of interest are currently underway. These results indicate a novel role for CDKN1ap21 in load-dependent osteoprogenitor proliferation and differentiation and that deletion of CDKN1ap21 results in an age-dependent release of osteoblast proliferation inhibition and increased bone formation and turnover.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN43922 , Annual Meeting American Society for Gravitational and Space Research (ASGSR); Oct 25, 2017 - Oct 28, 2017; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 195
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: In support of air revitalization system sorbent selection for future space missions, Ames Research Center (ARC) has performed CO2 capacity tests on various sorbents to complement structural strength tests from Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC). The materials of interest are: Grace Davison Grade 544 13x, Honeywell UOP APG III, VSA-10, BASF 13x, and Grace Davison Grade 522 5A. Each sorbents CO2 capacity was measured using a Micromeritics ASAP 2020 Physisorption Volumetric Analysis machine to produce 0C, 10C, 25C, 50C, and 75C isotherms. These datasets were then extrapolated using Langmuir 3-Site and Toth isotherm models to compare with previously measured capacity data from MSFC using a thermogravimetric analysis approach. The modeling and extrapolation from ARC data correlated well with data measured at MSFC.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN37094 , International Conference for Environmental Systems (ICES); Jul 16, 2016 - Jul 20, 2016; Charleston, SC; United States
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  • 196
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Limits and guidelines are set on microbial counts in produce to protect the consumer. Different agencies make specifications, which constitute when a product becomes unsafe for human consumption. Producers design their procedures to comply with the limits, but they are responsible creating their own internal standards. The limits and guidelines are summarized here to be applied to assess the microbial safety of the NASA Veggie Program.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: KSC-E-DAA-TN42115
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  • 197
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: As the world's space agencies and commercial entities continue to expand beyond Low Earth Orbit (LEO), novel approaches to carry out biomedical experiments with animals are required to address the challenge of adaptation to space flight and new planetary environments. The extended time and distance of space travel along with reduced involvement of Earth-based mission support increases the cumulative impact of the risks encountered in space. To respond to these challenges, it becomes increasingly important to develop the capability to manage an organism's self-regulatory control system, which would enable survival in extraterrestrial environments. To significantly reduce the risk to animals on future long duration space missions, we propose the use of metabolically flexible animal models as "pathfinders," which are capable of tolerating the environmental extremes exhibited in spaceflight, including altered gravity, exposure to space radiation, chemically reactive planetary environments and temperature extremes. In this report we survey several of the pivotal metabolic flexibility studies and discuss the importance of utilizing animal models with metabolic flexibility with particular attention given to the ability to suppress the organism's metabolism in spaceflight experiments beyond LEO. The presented analysis demonstrates the adjuvant benefits of these factors to minimize damage caused by exposure to spaceflight and extreme planetary environments. Examples of microorganisms and animal models with dormancy capabilities suitable for space research are considered in the context of their survivability under hostile or deadly environments outside of Earth. Potential steps toward implementation of metabolic control technology in spaceflight architecture and its benefits for animal experiments and manned space exploration missions are discussed.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN39143
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  • 198
    Publication Date: 2019-07-12
    Description: Exploration of the solar system is constrained by the cost of moving mass off Earth. Producing materials in situ will reduce the mass that must be delivered from earth. CO2 is abundant on Mars and manned spacecraft. On the ISS, NASA reacts excess CO2 with H2 to generate CH4 and H2O using the Sabatier System. The resulting water is recovered into the ISS, but the methane is vented to space. Thus, there is a capability need for systems that convert methane into valuable materials. Methanotrophic bacteria consume methane but these are poor synthetic biology platforms. Thus, there is a knowledge gap in utilizing methane in a robust and flexible synthetic biology platform. The yeast Pichia pastoris is a refined microbial factory that is used widely by industry because it efficiently secretes products. Pichia could produce a variety of useful products in space. Pichia does not consume methane but robustly consumes methanol, which is one enzymatic step removed from methane. Our goal is to engineer Pichia to consume methane thereby creating a powerful methane-consuming microbial factory.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: ARC-E-DAA-TN46034
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  • 199
    Publication Date: 2019-07-19
    Description: So you want to conduct human spaceflight research aboard the International Space Station (ISS)? Once your spaceflight research aboard the ISS is proposal is funded.... the real work begins. Because resources are so limited for ISS research, it is necessary to maximize the work being done, while at the same time, minimizing the resources spent. Astronauts may be presented with over 30 human research experiments and select, on average approximately 15 in which to participate. In order to conduct this many studies, ISSMP uses the study requirements provided by the principle investigator to integrate all of this work into the astronauts' complement. The most important thing for investigators to convey to the ISSMP team is their RESEARCH REQUIREMENTS. Requirements are captured in the Experiment document. This document is the official record of how, what, where and when data will be collected. One common mistake that investigators make is not taking this document seriously, but when push comes to shove, if a research requirement is not in this document....it will not get done. The research requirements are then integrated to form a complement of research for each astronaut. What do we mean by integration? Many experiments have overlapping requirements; blood draws, behavioral surveys, heart rate measurement. Where possible, these measures are combined to reduce redundancy and save crew time. Investigators can access these data via data sharing agreements. More examples of how ISS research is integrated will be presented. There are additional limitations commonly associated with human spaceflight research that will also be discussed. Large/heavy hardware, invasive procedures, and toxic reagents are extremely difficult to implement on the ISS. There are strict limits placed on the amount of blood that can be drawn from crew members during (and immediately after) spaceflight. These limits are based on 30-day rolling accumulations. We have recently had to start restricting studies due to this limit. The NASA Human Research Program (HRP) provides extensive support, via ISSMP, to help investigators cope with all of the intricacies of conducting human spaceflight research. This presentation will help you take the best advantage of that support.
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: JSC-CN-38021 , 2017 Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop (HRP IWS 2017); Jan 23, 2017 - Jan 26, 2017; Galveston, TX; United States
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  • 200
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: Spectrum is a multispectral fluorescence imager designed for capturing in vivo genetic expression in a variety of biological organisms, providing a capability that does not currently exist on the International Space Station (ISS). Researching organisms that have been transformed with in vivo reporter genes ligated with fluorescent proteins allows the scientific community to further understand the fundamental biological responses of these organisms when subjected to space environments. Model organisms that may utilize multispectral imaging on the ISS include unicellular organisms (e.g. Saccharomyces cerevisiae), plants (e.g. Arabidopsis thaliana), and invertebrates (e.g. Caenorhabditis elegans).
    Keywords: Life Sciences (General)
    Type: NASA/SP-2017-10-1095-KSC , KSC-E-DAA-TN53022
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