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Surface tension enables induced pluripotent stem cell culture in commercially available hardware during spaceflight

Space Sciences

Surface tension enables induced pluripotent stem cell culture in commercially available hardware during spaceflight

M. Mozneb, M. Arzt, et al.

This groundbreaking research, conducted by a team of experts including Maedeh Mozneb and Peggy A. Whitson, explores the effects of microgravity on human induced pluripotent stem cells and their derivatives, providing a foundation for future biomanufacturing experiments in space.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Low Earth Orbit (LEO) has emerged as a unique environment for evaluating altered stem cell properties in microgravity. LEO has become increasingly accessible for research and development due to progress in private spaceflight. Axiom Mission 2 (Ax-2) was launched as the second all-private astronaut mission to the International Space Station (ISS). Frozen human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) under the SOX2 promoter, as well as fibroblasts differentiated from SOX2-GFP hiPSCs, were sent to the ISS. Astronauts then thawed and seeded both cell types into commercially available 96-well plates, which provided surface tension that reduced fluid movement out of individual wells and showed that hiPSCs or hiPSC-derived fibroblasts could survive either in suspension or attached to a Matrigel substrate. Furthermore, both cell types could be transfected with red fluorescent protein (RFP)-expressing plasmid. We demonstrate that hiPSCs and hiPSC-fibroblasts can be thawed in microgravity in off-the-shelf, commercially-available cell culture hardware, can associate into 3D spheroids or grow adherently in Matrigel, and can be transfected with DNA. This lays the groundwork for future biomanufacturing experiments in space.
Publisher
npj Microgravity
Published On
Oct 15, 2024
Authors
Maedeh Mozneb, Madelyn Arzt, Pinar Mesci, Dylan M. N. Martin, Stephany Pohlman, George Lawless, Shankini Doraisingam, Sultan Al Neyadi, Rayyanah Barnawi, Ali Al Qarni, Peggy A. Whitson, John Shoffner, Jana Stoudemire, Stefanie Countryman, Clive N. Svendsen, Arun Sharma
Tags
Microgravity
Stem Cells
Axiom Mission 2
Biomanufacturing
Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells
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