Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
International

NASA Scientists Concerned About Toilet Microbes On ISS

IANS, 23 Nov, 2018 01:42 PM
    NASA is concerned over the strains of the bacterium Enterobacter, identified on the toilets of the International Space Station's (ISS), which can raise potential health implications for future missions, say Indian-origin scientists at the US space agency.
     
     
    Five strains of 'Enterobacter' bacterium isolated from the space toilet and the exercise platform on the ISS in March 2015 were investigated in a study led by a team from NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and California Institute of Technology (Caltech), US. 
     
     
    Genome sequencing of the samples revealed that all five strains belonged to a single species, Enterobacter bugandensis (E.bugandensis). 
     
     
    While these were not pathogenic to humans, E.bugandensis was linked to disease in neonates and a compromised patient, who were admitted to three different hospitals (in east Africa, Washington state and Colorado), the researchers said. 
     
     
    "Given the multi-drug resistance results for these ISS E.bugandensis genomes and the increased chance of pathogenicity we have identified, these species potentially pose important health considerations for future missions," said lead author Nitin Singh from NASA-JPL Caltech. 
     
     
    "However, it is important to understand that the strains found on the ISS were not virulent, which means they are not an active threat to human health, but something to be monitored," he added.
     
     
    For the study, published in the journal BMC Microbiology, the team compared the ISS strains to all publicly available genomes of 1,291 Enterobacter strains collected on Earth.
     
     
    They found that the ISS isolates had similar antimicrobial resistance patterns to the three clinical strains found on Earth and that they included 112 genes involved in virulence, disease and defence. 
     
     
    Using computer analyses, they predicted a 79 per cent probability that they may potentially cause disease. 
     
     
    "Whether or not an opportunistic pathogen like E.bugandensis causes disease and how much of a threat it is, depends on a variety of factors, including environmental ones," said Kasthuri Venkateswaran, Senior Research Scientist at the JPL. 
     
     
    "Further in vivo studies are needed to discern the impact that conditions on the ISS, such as microgravity, other space, and spacecraft-related factors, may have on pathogenicity and virulence," he noted.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Dubai Court Charges Indian Man For Abusing Ex-Female Employer

    Dubai Court Charges Indian Man For Abusing Ex-Female Employer
    A 30-year-old Indian man has been charged by a court here after he allegedly made online and telephonic threats and verbally abused his former boss, an Uzbek businesswoman.

    Dubai Court Charges Indian Man For Abusing Ex-Female Employer

    Celebrity Chef Anthony Bourdain Dead In Apparent Suicide At 61

    Celebrity Chef Anthony Bourdain Dead In Apparent Suicide At 61
    For his various culinary programs, Anthony Bourdain visited various parts of Rajasthan and Punjab to taste their unique foods. He also travelled to Kerala and the Himalayas. Check out the videos here.

    Celebrity Chef Anthony Bourdain Dead In Apparent Suicide At 61

    Kerala Farmer In The UAE Gets Into Guinness Book Of World Records

    Kerala Farmer In The UAE Gets Into Guinness Book Of World Records
    An Indian farmer in the UAE has set a Guinness World Record by distributing the largest number of curry tree saplings in Sharjah, according to a media report on Thursday.

    Kerala Farmer In The UAE Gets Into Guinness Book Of World Records

    Gurdwara, Mosque In UK Set On Fire In Arson Attacks

    Gurdwara, Mosque In UK Set On Fire In Arson Attacks
    A popular gurdwara and a mosque were set on fire in arson attacks at the same time in English city of Leeds with the police treating them as hate crimes, according to media report on Wednesday.

    Gurdwara, Mosque In UK Set On Fire In Arson Attacks

    Muslim Groups To Boycott Donald Trump's Iftar Party

    The White House said there will be roughly 30 to 40 different attendees at Donald Trump's dinner.

    Muslim Groups To Boycott Donald Trump's Iftar Party

    ‘No Big Changes’ In H-1B Visa, Nothing New On H-4 Rules, Says US

    ‘No Big Changes’ In H-1B Visa, Nothing New On H-4 Rules, Says US
    The Trump administration's move to end the Obama-era rule could have an impact on more than 70,000 H-4 visas holders, who have work permits.

    ‘No Big Changes’ In H-1B Visa, Nothing New On H-4 Rules, Says US