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February 27, 2025

The ISS is overly sterile: Making it 'dirtier' could improve astronaut health

Credit: CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Astronauts often experience immune dysfunction, skin rashes, and other inflammatory conditions while traveling in space. A new study in the journal Cell suggests that these issues could be due to the excessively sterile nature of spacecraft.

The study showed that the International Space Station (ISS) has a much lower diversity of microbes compared to human-built environments on Earth, and the microbes that are present are mostly species carried by humans onto the ISS, suggesting that the presence of more microbes from nature could help improve in the space station.

"Future built environments, including space stations, could benefit from intentionally fostering diverse microbial communities that better mimic the natural microbial exposures experienced on Earth, rather than relying on highly sanitized spaces," says co-first author Rodolfo Salido of the University of California, San Diego (UC San Diego).

The researchers collaborated with astronauts who swabbed 803 different surfaces on the ISS—around 100 times more samples than were taken in previous surveys. Back on Earth, the researchers identified which and chemicals were present in each sample. Then, they created three-dimensional maps illustrating where each was found on the ISS and how the bacteria and chemicals might be interacting.

The team found that overall, was the main source of microbes throughout the ISS. Chemicals from cleaning products and disinfectants were present ubiquitously throughout the station.

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They also found that different "modules" or rooms within the ISS hosted different microbial communities and chemical signatures, and these differences were determined by the module's use. For example, dining and food preparation areas contained more food-associated microbes, whereas the space toilet contained more urine- and fecal-associated microbes and metabolites.

"We noticed that the abundance of disinfectant on the surface of the International Space Station is highly correlated with the microbiome diversity at different locations on the space station," says co-first author Nina Zhao of UC San Diego.

When they compared the ISS to different human-built environments on Earth, the researchers found that the ISS microbial communities were less diverse than most of the samples from Earth and were more similar to samples from industrialized, isolated environments, such as hospitals and closed habitats, and homes in urbanized areas.

Compared to most of the Earth samples, the ISS surfaces were lacking in free-living environmental microbes that are usually found in soil and water. Intentionally incorporating these microbes and the substrates they live in into the ISS could improve astronaut health without sacrificing hygiene, the researchers say. The researchers compare their suggestion to the well-studied beneficial impacts of gardening on the immune system.

"There's a big difference between exposure to healthy soil from gardening versus stewing in our own filth, which is kind of what happens if we're in a strictly enclosed with no ongoing input of those healthy sources of microbes from the outside," says Knight.

In the future, the researchers hope to refine their analyses to be able to detect potentially pathogenic microbes and signals of human health from environmental metabolites. They say that these methods could also help improve the health of people living and working in similarly sterile environments on Earth.

"If we really want life to thrive outside Earth, we can't just take a small branch of the tree of life and launch it into space and hope that it will work out," says Salido.

"We need to start thinking about what other beneficial companions we should be sending with these astronauts to help them develop ecosystems that will be sustainable and beneficial for all."

More information: The International Space Station Has a Unique and Extreme Microbial and Chemical Environment Driven by Use Patterns, Cell (2025). .

Journal information: Cell

Provided by Cell Press

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The International Space Station (ISS) has a lower microbial diversity compared to Earth environments, primarily hosting human-associated microbes. This sterility may contribute to astronaut health issues like immune dysfunction. Introducing diverse environmental microbes could enhance astronaut health without compromising hygiene. Different ISS modules host distinct microbial communities based on their use. The study suggests fostering diverse microbial ecosystems in space to support astronaut well-being.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.