Astronaut Twin Study Reveals How Space Impacts the Body

Preliminary results suggest a major shift in one astronaut’s microbiome.


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Astronaut Scott Kelly (right) and his twin brother, retired astronaut Mark Kelly (left) ROBERT MARKOWITZ, FLICKR Astronauts Scott and Mark Kelly are identical twins and the test subjects of the NASA Twin study, a unique investigation into how stressful spaceflight is to the body. While Scott Kelly spent 340 days at the International Space Station (ISS), his twin brother remained on Earth and became a ground-based control subject. Since Scott returned home last March, ten groups of researchers have been analyzing biological samples collected from each sibling before, during, and after the trip. The scientists released preliminary results at the annual Investigator’s Workshop for NASA’s Human Research Program in Texas (January 23 to 26).

“Almost everyone is reporting that we see differences,” Christopher Mason, a geneticist at Weill Cornell Medicine who was involved in the study, told Nature. For example, researchers found Scott’s telomeres were longer and his levels of DNA methylation were lower in comparison to his twin. One team found differences in the twins’ microbiomes—there was a major shift in the ratio of two dominant bacterial groups (Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes) in Scott’s digestive tract, while Mark only experienced minor fluctuations. In both cases, Scott Kelly’s data returned to pre-flight levels shortly after he returned to Earth.

One potential explanation, according to The Verge, is the specialized diet astronauts eat in space. But if the astronaut diet was entirely to blame, one would expect to see a change ...

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