More than one, in fact
Unknown Species of Bacteria Discovered in China’s Space Station.
Swabs from China’s Tiangong space station reveal traces of a bacterium unseen on Earth, with characteristics that may help it function under stressful environmental conditions hundreds of kilometers above the planet’s surface.
The swabs were taken from a cabin on board the space station in May 2023 by the Shenzhou-15 crew as part of one of two surveys by the China Space Station Habitation Area Microbiome Programme.
Like species of Bacillus, N. circulans and its space-faring relatives pack their essential chemistry into hardy spores to survive times of great stress. It’s not clear whether N. tiangongensis evolved on the station or arrived in spore form with at least a few of its distinguishing features in place.
On the other hand, it seems to have lost the ability to utilize other energy-packed substances its cousins happily chow down on.
There’s also not a great deal we can do about it. An examination of the ‘clean rooms’ NASA used to prepare the Mars Phoenix mission revealed dozens of microbe strains belonging to 26 novel species.
A recent study of these novel bacteria found their amazing ability to survive conditions we would assume to make the environment sterile came down to genes linked to DNA repair and resistance to levels of substances other microbes would find toxic.
It’s yet to be determined whether Niallia tiangongensis poses any threat to the health of Tiangong’s astronauts, but given its cousin’s ability to cause sepsis in immunocompromised patients and its newfound ability to break down gelatin, the potential for health problems from this and other space microbes is a serious issue.
