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Germs Taken Into Space May Come Back Deadlier

westlake writes "Sounds like the plot for a B-movie, doesn't it? Germs go into space and come back stronger and deadlier than ever. Except, it really happened. In a medical experiment, salmonella carried about the space shuttle in the fall of 2006 proved far more lethal to lab mice than their earth-bound source. 90% dead vs. 60% dead in twenty-six days, with half the mice dying at 1/3 the oral dose. Apparently 167 genes in the space-evolved strain had changed. The likely cause: In microgravity the force of fluids passing over the cells is low, similar to conditions in the gastrointestinal tract, and the cells adapted quickly to the new environment."

16 of 137 comments (clear)

  1. conditions outside the body by mrvan · · Score: 5, Interesting

    TFS states that the deadliness is bacause the germs were adapter better to the conditions inside the body, so kill lab mice faster. Outside the lab, these germs will have to pass from host to host, and presumable in between the hosts conditions will be less like microgravity. SO, they might be deadlier, but with less rate of infection. A deadlier disease with lower infection rate might actually be less of a risk: hosts die more quickly and not enough new hosts get infected.

    Also: if the new germs are really more well-adapted (ic better at multiplying and spreading), wouldn't they have evolved like that on earth? Especially since the evolutionary step is apparently small enough to be attained by a limited colony in a very limited time?

    1. Re:conditions outside the body by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Funny

      A deadlier disease with lower infection rate might actually be less of a risk: hosts die more quickly and not enough new hosts get infected. As long as it's you who gets infected and not me, I agree. ;)
    2. Re:conditions outside the body by s_p_oneil · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "Also: if the new germs are really more well-adapted (ic better at multiplying and spreading), wouldn't they have evolved like that on earth? Especially since the evolutionary step is apparently small enough to be attained by a limited colony in a very limited time?"

      Not necessarily. Evolution is like a simple hill-climbing algorithm in computer programming. It blindly heads in any upward direction without any way of knowing if it will get stuck at the top of a small hill when there is a much bigger hill right next to it. It is unnatural for it to go back downhill (to weaken itself) on purpose to look for bigger hills to climb. But changes to the environment distort the landscape, in some cases turning hills into valleys and forcing life to climb back up or die out.

      So most likely the germs had their little hill turned upside down in micro-gravity and were forced to climb up to the top of a new one. Their landscape got turned upside down again when they came back down to Earth, and they ended up finding a bigger hill than the one they started on.

    3. Re:conditions outside the body by TubeSteak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The researchers found 167 genes had changed in the salmonella that went to space.

      Why?

      "That's the 64 million dollar question," Nickerson said. "We do not know with 100 percent certainty what the mechanism is of space flight that's inducing these changes."

      However, they think it's a force called fluid shear. TFA talks about fluid shear while many other articles http://news.google.com/news?q=space+biofilm mention that in space, the bacteria forms a biofilm.

      More importantly, it seems like every other article answers the "64 million dollar question." The answer:

      The researchers' experiment revealed that a genetic switch called "Hfq," which may control more than 160 genes in S. typhimurium, turns on in space and causes S. typhimurium to become three times more virulent than on the Earth's surface. I'm not really sure why this AP article is so deficient.
      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    4. Re:conditions outside the body by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      A deadlier disease with lower infection rate might actually be less of a risk: hosts die more quickly and not enough new hosts get infected. As long as it's you who gets infected and not me, I agree. ;) Both you and the parent are not paying attention to the true significance of this story. What would happen if bacteria was on a satellite for years and then came back to the Earth? Everybody has always assumed that it was meteors or bioweapons lab leaks that were causing zombie outbreaks, but it could just as easily be supergerms that are so highly evolved that they can control the dead!

      Isn't it entirely probable, nay likely even that an old Soviet bioweapons satellite is going to crash sometime with germs that will reanimate the dead on a large scale?
    5. Re:conditions outside the body by mr_mischief · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think you just hit on th very idea of foresight. It's one of those things that's supposed to separate the higher mammals from things like bacteria and from natural processes like evolution, after all.

      That is, unless someone believes in sentient bacteria or a divine hand of an intelligent God/gods guiding evolution. Anything left to chance and trial will ultimately only rarely see a trade of a short-term negative for a long-term positive, because it would have to happen by chance and without conscious effort.

    6. Re:conditions outside the body by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mutation tends to be more random than not, so you are likely to get organisms that cannot actually DO anything useful (assuming making zombies is useful) or lack any particular advantage over the original species. In fact they may be sterile or weakened.

      Irradiated flesh doesn't turn into the Hulk or glow or become self-intelligent. No. It just dies I have several thousand volumes of books (comic books) that contradict you. Who should I believe, some Nobel prize winning biologist who has only written a couple dozen scientific papers in his life (and only a couple dealing with radiation) or Stan Lee who has published hundreds of volumes dealing with the biological and social effects of radiation?

      Suppose the germ developed a version of itself that was 100% lethal and then killed its own host before the host could spread it. Well the germ dies too, doesn't it? Not if it reanimates the dead! Did you miss that part? These germs are going to be so deadly that they take you past 'dead' and bring you to 'undead.' You might even say that they are undeadly! The only thing that they need to survive is a highly dense energy source that their host body could consume--maybe something like the brains of unsuspecting victims.
  2. I know... by PixelScuba · · Score: 3, Funny

    This was first documented in 1988, but they don't want you to know about it.

  3. Vonnegut by stoolpigeon · · Score: 4, Interesting

    he said the whole point of life is to create germs tough enough to make it through space on a rock. i think he would have chuckled at this.

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  4. One Giant Virus for Mankind by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 5, Funny

    The AIDS plague "patient zero" is estimated to have become infected in 1969, the year men returned from the moon.

    This plague that has killed millions of people, primarily among homosexual men, perhaps originated in a tiny canister of testosterone-pumped men trapped in a tiny metal can thousands of miles from Earth, with only each other to turn to in conditions of unprecedented stress and lonliness.

    Yep, it does sound like the plot from a B movie - by John Waters.

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    make install -not war

  5. Bacteria. by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just remember WHO this planet belongs to after all.

    I for one welcome our mutated Moneran overlords.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  6. Amen to that by DrYak · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Outside the lab, these germs will have to pass from host to host [...] less rate of infection. A deadlier disease with lower infection rate might actually be less of a risk: hosts die more quickly and not enough new hosts get infected.


    This is something like Rule n1 when dealing with epidemiology.
    And something that is systematically neglected when the media try to instill mass hysteria about some latest bug.

    Compare :
    - Plague : kills, but slowly, and very good at transmission - did decimate population.
    - Spanish flu : was deadly, but did spread very easily (specially at a post-war time with limited availability of medical means) - did kill quite a few people.

    With :
    - Ebola : violently deadly in an almost "B movie gore"-style, but sucks at transmission (kills to fast. The virus has almost no time to leave the host before killing it) - never became a widespread disease.
    - Avian flu : it was severe in the handful few people who caught it (although one may contest that those people were mostly in developing country and thus had limited access to medical means) BUT it's far from effecient when it comes to transmission (it's a birds' disease, damn it) one must almost live everyday with and almost sleep with chickens to catch it - hasn't been epidemic yet, and won't be, at least not until it mixes with human viruses (not very likely to happen quickly on a large scale).
    - Mad cow disease : kills slowly (brain slowly becomes a sponge) but has one of the most improbable mecanism of transmission (one must eat brain or brain derivative) - never was a widespread disease (at least outside cannibal communities).

    And same will happen with lysteria-from-outer-space : Yes, it kills mice efficiently. But basically it has changed. It has traded characteristics that where good in surviving on earth, for characteristic that are good for microgravity, and that happen to be good for the intestine too. Thus it will probably completely suck at propagating.

    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  7. Re:Well... by RDW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As some of the more accurate reports on this finding have pointed out, the changes were in the expression levels of the genes rather than in their composition, so no need to invoke the Flying Spaghetti Monster on this occasion! Gene expression is always responding to changes in environmental conditions, so it's not at all surprising that spaceflight is going to cause some measurable effects (hopefully in genes that are functionaly relevant to the observed change in phenotype).

  8. No immune system = no training against one, too ! by DrYak · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This means that the defensive systems that normally adapt to handle them as the mutations arise (think: each strain of the common cold that ends up "going around" your local school/business) don't get a chance until the germ population is sizeable and has the mutated traits spread throughout.


    It works the other way too. The outer-space-bacteria has lived and mutated in an environment without or with very few defensive system, to which it normally needs to adapt to handle them and manage to survive and proliferate. Thus the bacteria doesn't get a chance to keep it's knowledge in surviving when it come back to earth.

    It's most likely to get pwnd by the first antibody or marcophage it encounters.

    This lysteria is an exception because the microgravity environment it was evolving in was actually *closer* to the target environment (human gut) that the places where it usually lives. And then, as the first-poster pointed out, you have a bacteria that is quick to kill lab mice, but will probably suck at transmission because it has traded away its capacity to survive in normal environment.

    People are usually marvelled at the incerdible diversity that is brought by evolution. But there's another possible point of view. Whenever some species specialize into something, it's actually losing functions : at least it is losing its polyvalence and ability to survive in diverse environment.
    One may consider the human as the pinnacle of evolution given all what we managed to achieve. Or we may consider the humans as a profoundly degenerate species, that has lost its ability to survive in most environment. that is hugely dependent on resources it can't produce anymore but must hunt. We've become so much fragile and incapable biologically, that we had to develop some intelligence to be able to circumvent those short comings. As opposed to a bacteria that can just grow and reproduce in a much wider set of environment without needing to grow a pair of arms to be able to do it.
    This pessimistic point of view may be useful sometimes to explain or predict some phenomenon :
    - like mass exctinctions
    - like why the plain simple cockroaches seem to be better at surviving than mighty dinosaurs
    - like what will probably happen to the outer-space-mutant-bugs
    - like why intelligent design proponents are wrong with their fundamental concept of "irreductible complexity". It's not complexity, it's actually very weird, funny and circonvoluted side effects of something that was initially a simplification.
    --
    "Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
  9. Yeah, but no. by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
  10. So THAT'S what happened with Jason X! by Fluchs · · Score: 4, Funny

    I kept telling people how realistic this movie was!
    http://imdb.com/title/tt0211443/
    "Evil Gets an Upgrade." Man, so ahead of its time.