VIDEO: Research To Advance Disease Therapies Among Cargo Headed To Space Station On Dragon Monday – SpaceCoastDaily.com

Posted: August 13, 2017 at 1:48 am

By NASA // August 13, 2017

ABOVE VIDEO:The SpaceX CRS-12 mission will carry more than 20 ISS National Lab experiments to the International Space Station ranging from research on Parkinsons disease, DNA science to many others.

BREVARD COUNTY KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FLORIDA The SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft is targeted for launch Monday, Aug. 14 from Kennedy Space Center for its 12th commercial resupply (CRS-12) mission to the International Space Station.

The flight will deliver investigations and instruments that study cosmic ray particles, protein crystal growth, stem cell-mediated recellularization and a nanosateliite technology demonstration.

The vehicle also will deliver supplies and equipment to crew members living aboard the station.

Here are some highlights of research that will be delivered:

Investigation studies cosmic ray particles

Cosmic ray particles reach Earth from far outside the solar system with energies well beyond what man-made accelerators can achieve. The Cosmic Ray Energetics and Mass (ISS-CREAM) instrument, attached to the Japanese Experiment Module Exposed Facility, measures the charges of cosmic ray particles ranging from hydrogen to iron nuclei.

The data collected from the CREAM instrument will be used to address fundamental science questions such as:

Do supernovae supply the bulk of cosmic ray particles?

What is the history of cosmic ray particles in the galaxy?

Can the energy spectra of cosmic rays result from a single mechanism?

Tested in several long duration balloon flights, the CREAM instrument holds the longest known exposure record for a single balloon-borne experiment at approximately 190 days of exposure. ISS-CREAMs three-year mission will help the scientific community build a stronger understanding of the fundamental structure of the universe.

Microgravity-grown protein crystals aid in understanding of Parkinsons disease

ABOVE VIDEO:The Michael J. Fox Foundation is sending an experiment to the ISS National Lab to investigate the LRRK2 protein, a key target in identifying the makeup of Parkinsons disease.

The microgravity environment of the space station allows protein crystals to grow larger and in more perfect shapes than earth-grown crystals, allowing them to be better analyzed on Earth.

Developed by the Michael J. Fox Foundation, Anatrace and Com-Pac International, the Crystallization of Leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) under Microgravity Conditions (CASIS PCG 7) investigation will use the orbiting laboratorys microgravity environment to grow larger versions of this important protein, implicated in Parkinsons disease.

Defining the exact shape and morphology of LRRK2 would help scientists to better understand the pathology of Parkinsons and aid in the development of therapies against this target.

Telescope-hosting nanosatellite tests new concept

The Kestrel Eye (NanoRacks-KE IIM) investigation is a microsatellite carrying an optical imaging system payload. This investigation validates the concept of using microsatellites in low-Earth orbit to support critical operations, such as providing lower-cost Earth imagery in time-sensitive situations such as tracking severe weather and detecting natural disasters.

Sponsored by the space station U.S. National Laboratory, the overall mission goal for the investigation is to demonstrate that small satellites are viable platforms for providing critical path support to operations and hosting advanced payloads.

Growth of lung tissue in space could provide information about disease pathology

ABOVE VIDEO:The University of Texas Medical Branch will be sending human lung tissue to the ISS National Lab to better understand how lung tissue functions in microgravity in preparation for long-term spaceflight.

The Effect of Microgravity on Stem Cell Mediated Recellularization (Lung Tissue) uses the microgravity environment of space to test strategies for growing new lung tissue.

Using bioengineering techniques, the Lung Tissue investigation cultures different types of lung cells in controlled conditions aboard the space station.

The cells are grown in a specialized framework that supplies them with critical growth factors so that scientists can observe how gravity affects growth and specialization as cells become new lung tissue.

The SpaceX Dragon cargo spacecraft is targeted for launch Monday, Aug. 14 from Kennedy Space Center for its 12th commercial resupply (CRS-12) mission to the International Space Station.

Tissue mimic models such as this also have the potential to be used for assessing drug or chemical toxicity by biotechnology and pharmaceutical companies and could allow for rapid testing of new chemicals and compounds, considerably lowering the overall costs for research and development of new drugs.

The ultimate goal of this investigation is to produce bioengineered human lung tissue that can be used as a predictive model of human responses allowing for the study of lung development, lung physiology or disease pathology.

These investigations and others launching aboard CRS-12 will join many other investigations currently happening aboard the space station. Follow @ISS_Research for more information about the science happening on station.

CLICK HERE FOR SPACE NEWS FROM NASA

Click here to contribute your news or announcements Free

Follow this link:
VIDEO: Research To Advance Disease Therapies Among Cargo Headed To Space Station On Dragon Monday - SpaceCoastDaily.com

Related Posts