Berkeley Lab Scientists Believe Biomanufacturing a Key to Long-term Manned Space Missions
Does synthetic biology hold the key to manned space exploration of the Moon and Mars? Berkeley Lab researchers have used synthetic biology to produce an inexpensive and reliable microbial-based alternative to the world’s most effective anti-malaria drug, and to develop clean, green and sustainable alternatives to gasoline, diesel and jet fuels. In the future, synthetic biology could also be used to make manned space missions more practical.
“Not only does synthetic biology promise to make the travel to extraterrestrial locations more practical and bearable, it could also be transformative once explorers arrive at their destination,” says Adam Arkin, director of Berkeley Lab’s Physical Biosciences Division (PBD) and a leading authority on synthetic and systems biology.
“During flight, the ability to augment fuel and other energy needs, to provide small amounts of needed materials, plus renewable, nutritional and taste-engineered food, and drugs-on-demand can save costs and increase astronaut health and welfare,” Arkin says. “At an extraterrestrial base, synthetic biology could make even more effective use of the catalytic activities of diverse organisms.”
Arkin is the senior author of a paper in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface that reports on a techno-economic analysis demonstrating “the significant utility of deploying non-traditional biological techniques to harness available volatiles and waste resources on manned long-duration space missions.” The paper is titled “Towards Synthetic Biological Approaches to Resource Utilization on Space Missions.” The lead and corresponding author is Amor Menezes, a postdoctoral scholar in Arkin’s research group at the University of California (UC) Berkeley. Other co-authors are John Cumbers and John Hogan with the NASA Ames Research Center.
One of the biggest challenges to manned space missions is the expense. The NASA rule-of-thumb is that every unit mass of payload launched requires the support of an additional 99 units of mass, with “support” encompassing everything from fuel to oxygen to food and medicine for the astronauts, etc. Most of the current technologies now deployed or under development for providing this support are abiotic, meaning non-biological. Arkin, Menezes and their collaborators have shown that providing this support with technologies based on existing biological processes is a more than viable alternative.
The Latest on: Synthetic Biology for Space Exploration
via Google News
The Latest on: Synthetic Biology for Space Exploration
- Plants have been grown in lunar soil for the 1st time everon May 13, 2022 at 7:01 am
A study detailing the plant experiment published Thursday in the journal Communications Biology ... with space data to use for a comparison. Arabidopsis seeds were also planted in a synthetic ...
- Apollo Mission Moon Rocks Support Plant Growthon May 12, 2022 at 3:47 pm
Using samples of rock and dust that cover the hard rock surface (regolith) collected during the Apollo 11, 12, and 17 missions as substrates to grow plants, University of Florida scientists report the ...
- Plants have been grown in lunar soil for the 1st time everon May 12, 2022 at 8:00 am
Scientists have grown plants in lunar soil using samples collected during the Apollo missions to the moon. This is the first time plants have been sprouted and grown in soil from another celestial ...
- Calyxt Reports First Quarter 2022 Financial Resultson May 5, 2022 at 4:59 pm
May 5, 2022 /PRNewswire/ -- Calyxt, Inc. (Nasdaq: CLXT), a plant-based synthetic biology company, today announced financial ... This enables us to carve out space for Calyxt's proprietary technology ...
- Bayer to Create Ag Biologicals Powerhouse Partnership With Ginkgo Bioworks, Advancing Joyn Bio Technology Platformson April 25, 2022 at 4:53 pm
“Bayer’s work in the rapidly growing biologics space is an essential ... Joyn’s successful developments in the exploration of the potential of synthetic biology in nitrogen fixation and ...
via Bing News