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Housecleaning In Space

Posted on: Friday, 6 February 2009, 14:55 CST

http://www.redorbit.com/news/space/1635474/housecleaning_in_space/

Even in space, someone has to clean the bathroom. Good housekeeping

is essential when you're living in the close quarters of a tightly-

sealed spaceship for months at a time. To make this possible, NASA

scientists have developed a tricorder-like device called " LOCAD-PTS "

that can track down microscopic bacteria and fungi. It helps

astronauts do their chores.

" The crew of the space station works hard to keep things clean, " says

Norm Wainwright, principal investigator for LOCAD-PTS (Lab-On-A-Chip

Application Development Portable Test System) at the Marshall Space

Flight Center. " Our instrument tells them where to focus their

efforts. "

Strange, but true: LOCAD works using enzymes from the immune system

of a horseshoe crab. Astronauts swab a surface with a high-tech Q-

tip, insert a sample into the LOCAD device, and crab-chemistry does

the rest. In less than 15 minutes, the LOCAD test system tells the

crew if they've got some cleaning to do.

During March to May 2007, astronaut Sunita " Suni " proved

LOCAD's adeptness at detecting gram negative bacteria in the space

station's Node 1 and US Lab.

In June and September 2008, a station crew tested a second type of

LOCAD cartridge, designed to detect fungi. First, they tested Node 1

and found it virtually fungi-free.

That sounds like great news, but it didn't help the LOCAD scientists

prove the abilities of the new cartridge.

So just a couple of weeks ago, astronaut Sandy Magnus decided to play

hard ball. She thought of a place that would surely be a fungi

factory – the spot where crewmembers put their feet to brace

themselves while working on their laptops.

Wrong. Clean.

A determined fungi-finder, Magnus tried another location. She went to

the " gym, " where station astronauts ride a modified exercise bike and

a treadmill to combat the muscle weakening effects of microgravity.

To keep themselves from floating up off the bicycle seat while

pedaling, the sweaty space cyclers hold onto hand brackets.

You guessed it -- fungi are thoroughly enamored with an oft-sweaty

surface. LOCAD ratted out some hand bracket fungi.

" The fungi posed no immediate health concern to the crew, " says

Maule, LOCAD-PTS project scientist. " But Magnus called to Houston to

say, 'Tomorrow I'm going to give those brackets a good cleaning.'

That's just what we want -- the intuitive reaction 'I need to clean

that.' "

In years to come, spacecraft cleanliness will be a critical issue for

another reason: " One of the key scientific goals for NASA's future

Constellation missions beyond low Earth orbit will be to prepare to

search for life on Mars, " says Maule.

All humans carry stowaway microbes around with them on their skin,

microbes that shouldn't be allowed to contaminate Mars samples. On

the other hand, they don't want to bring unwanted alien life forms

back into the spacecraft.

" The crew will need a way to monitor themselves before and after EVA

[extra-vehicular activity], " says Maule. " LOCAD is ideal for that

purpose. We've used it successfully during EVA tests on the ground. "

The LOCAD team has also conducted several tests in the US Quest

airlock, the conduit from the interior cabin to the outside of the

space station where the crew " camps out " overnight and depressurizes

before venturing outside. LOCAD proved the airlock to be pretty clean

in general, but showed that the handle to the airlock entrance

harbored gram negative bacteria. Bacteria on a surface like the

airlock handle would be a concern if crew members were about to

embark on a sample collecting excursion on Mars.

It would seem that finding fungi onboard the ISS is just the

beginning for LOCAD. There are chores to be done ... and the whole

solar system awaits.

---

Notes:

In closed quarters like your home and the space station,

microorganisms can not only present a human health risk -- they can

even attack electronics, causing corrosion. Fungi can soil air and

water filters too. But LOCAD finds fungi and germs before they have a

chance to multiply and do their dirty work.

Astronauts gather samples for testing by swiping surfaces with a

small, dry swab. Then they flush sterile water through the swab,

converting the sample into liquid form, and place a few drops into

the LOCAD PTS. The system yields its answer less than 15 minutes

later, while standard methods of culturing can take several days and

may require return to Earth for further analysis.

Oddly enough, to sniff out trouble in a hurry, LOCAD enlists the help

of creatures whose ancestors were crawling around in the ocean 300

million years ago -- horseshoe crabs. No, there are no armor-clad

hordes of horseshoe crabs scuttling around under the astronauts' feet

scarfing up germs and fungi. But the hearty horseshoe crabs,

according to project scientist Jake Maule, do have a " very primitive

but extremely sensitive immune system " that helps detect the presence

of unwanted microbes.

" We use an enzyme cascade from that immune system. One part of the

horseshoe crab's enzyme cascade is activated by endotoxin -- a cell

wall component of gram negative bacteria. Another part of the

horseshoe crab's enzyme cascade is specifically activated by glucan,

a cell wall component of fungi. "

(The creatures are not harmed in any way and are released after some

of their blood is extracted for enzyme harvesting.)

Dauna Coulter, Science @ NASA

---

Image 2: Astronaut Greg Chamitoff swabs for fungi on Aug. 20, 2008

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