Santa Fe New Mexican

High-flying experiment: Do stem cells grow better in space?

- By Laura Ungar

Researcher Dhruv Sareen’s own stem cells are now orbiting the Earth. The mission? To test whether they’ll grow better in zero gravity.

Scientists at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles are trying to find new ways to produce huge batches of a type of stem cell that can generate nearly any other type of cell in the body — and potentiall­y be used to make treatments for many diseases. The cells arrived over the weekend at the Internatio­nal Space Station on a supply ship.

“I don’t think I would be able to pay whatever it costs now” to take a private ride to space, Sareen said. “At least a part of me in cells can go up!”

The experiment is the latest research project that involves shooting stem cells into space. Some, like this one, aim to overcome the terrestria­l difficulty of mass producing the cells. Others explore how space travel impacts the cells in the body. And some help better understand diseases such as cancer.

“By pushing the boundaries like this, it’s knowledge and it’s science and it’s learning,” said Clive Svendsen, executive director of Cedars-Sinai’s Regenerati­ve Medicine Institute.

Six earlier projects from the U.S., China and Italy sent up various types of stem cells — including his team’s study of the effects of microgravi­ty on cell-level heart function, said Dr. Joseph Wu of Stanford University, who directs the Stanford Cardiovasc­ular Institute. Wu helped coordinate a series of programs on spacebased stem cell research last year.

Earthly applicatio­ns of much of this research may be a little ways off.

At this point, the only stem cellbased products approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion contain blood-forming stem cells from umbilical cord blood for patients with blood disorders such as certain cases of lymphoma. There are no approved therapies using the kind of stem cells being sent to space or others derived from them, said Jeffrey Millman, a biomedical engineerin­g expert at Washington University in St. Louis.

But clinical trials underway involving stem cells target conditions such as macular degenerati­on, Parkinson’s disease and heart attack damage. And Millman is involved in research that could lead to a new approach for treating Type 1 diabetes.

Scientists see great promise in stem cells. That promise is tempered by a frustratin­g earthly problem: The planet’s gravity makes it tough to grow the vast quantities of cells necessary for future therapies that may require more than a billion per patient.

“With current technology right now, even if the FDA instantly approved any of these therapies, we don’t have the capacity to manufactur­e” what’s needed, Millman said.

The issue? In large bioreactor­s, the cells need to be stirred vigorously or they clump or fall to the bottom of the tank, Millman said. The stress can cause most cells to die.

“In zero G, there’s no force on the cells, so they can just grow in a different way,” Svendsen said.

The Cedars-Sinai team has sent up what are called induced pluripoten­t stem cells. Many scientists consider them the perfect starting materials for all sorts of personaliz­ed, cell-based treatments. They carry a patient’s own DNA, and their versatilit­y makes them similar to embryonic stem cells, only they are reprogramm­ed from adults’ skin or blood cells.

For their experiment, which is being funded by NASA, a shoebox-sized container holds bags filled with spheres of cells and all of the pumps and solutions needed to keep them alive for four weeks. The cargo will also include neural stem cells originatin­g from Svendsen. The scientists used stem cells derived from their own white blood cells because it was easy for them to give consent.

They will run the experiment remotely with a box of cells on Earth for comparison. They’ll get the space experiment back in five weeks or so, when it returns in the same SpaceX capsule.

The work is designed to pave the way for more NASA-funded research. If they are able to figure out how to make billions of cells in orbit, Svendsen said, “the impact could be huge.”

During the same cargo launch, researcher­s from the University of California, San Diego, sent blood stem cells to the space station, a repeat of an experiment they did last year. They want to find out if low Earth orbit induces faster aging in the cells, leading to problems that set the stage for precancero­us changes. One goal is to protect astronauts’ health.

 ?? ROSCOSMOS SPACE AGENCY VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? The Internatio­nal Space Station in March, photograph­ed by the crew of a Russian Soyuz MS-19 spaceship after undocking from the station. Scientists are trying to find new ways to produce a type of stem cell that can generate nearly any other type of cell in the body.
ROSCOSMOS SPACE AGENCY VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO The Internatio­nal Space Station in March, photograph­ed by the crew of a Russian Soyuz MS-19 spaceship after undocking from the station. Scientists are trying to find new ways to produce a type of stem cell that can generate nearly any other type of cell in the body.

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