For years scientists had
to beg for access to the space shuttle to conduct microgravity research, until
a well-timed salmonella discovery helped cinch a spot for Spacehab Inc. on all
but one of the shuttle's remaining scheduled flights.
"The timing couldn't
have been better," Spacehab President Jim Royston said June 16, two days
after Space Shuttle Discovery
returned from the international space station with test tubes of the
salmonella bacteria.
Amid growing concern
about salmonella outbreaks and an increase in the bacteria's resistance to
existing medicine, Spacehab sent a second round of salmonella vaccine research
to the space station May 31. Previous tests have shown salmonella is more
virulent in microgravity, although scientists are not sure why.
Royston leaves the
increased virulence question to scientists. His mission now is to take results
of the Discovery mission, which validated similar findings aboard Endeavour
in March, to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. He hopes the agency
will allow Spacehab to begin human trials of a salmonella vaccine by October.
The Webster, Texas-based
company has a list of 20 other infectious diseases to send to the space station
for vaccine research. On each of 10 upcoming shuttle flights, Spacehab will
send between eight and 16 of its Group Activation Packs polycarbonate
cylinders containing eight 114-millimeter test tubes. With the turn of a
handle, an astronaut will release bacteria-eating worms and growth nutrients
from one end of each test tube to mix with disease-causing bacteria in a
separate compartment at the other end of the tube. The packs also have a motor
and can be activated remotely.
"Salmonella is a
good bacteria to prove that our system is stable and reliable," Royston
said. "We've shown it's extremely reliable, it meets all requirements and
opens the door to move other vaccine candidates through this pipeline."
Through a partnership
with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Spacehab will share its research
but retain commercial rights. Veterans Affairs may use the data to conduct its
own research or to treat its patients, Royston said, adding that in exchange,
Spacehab has access to VA facilities.
A medical breakthrough
such as the discovery of a salmonella vaccine could generate enthusiasm in the
community of scientists who previously faced limited space access while the
shuttle transported massive parts for space station construction. With the $100
billion space station nearly complete and its designation as a National
Laboratory, new opportunities have emerged.
"Before, we had no
destination. The shuttle was doing its best to do simple research,"
Royston said. "Now all of the sudden with the space station completion ...
we have open-door access to what is probably mankind's greatest achievement."
NASA has made about half
of its space station research space available to commercial enterprise through
the National
Laboratory, which will go a long way with reluctant investors, Royston
said. Once the shuttle is retired, Spacehab can fly experiments to the space
station on the Russian-built Soyuz and Europe's Automated Transfer Vehicle.
Soyuz can return small samples, while other samples will produce data that can
be recorded and retrieved without returning the samples, he said.
"If the market is
there then the capability is there to do it. That's what we're trying to show
on this first one," he said. "We see it as a tool to get better data
faster."
In May, Spacehab
established a subsidiary, BioSpace Technolgies Inc., for its biotechnology
research both space-based and on the ground. The company, headed by Royston
for now, hired as its chief science officer Jeanne Becker, vice president and
associate director of the National Space Biomedical Research Institute in Houston.
Spacehab's efforts have
drawn support from the state of Florida, which has lured major biotechnology
companies to a 23-county high-tech corridor stretching from coast to coast in
North and Central Florida, and includes Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The
state's space arm, Space Florida, has committed $90,000 to the salmonella
project, and Steve Kohler, president of Space Florida, plans to ask his board
to approve $210,000 more.
"This is exposing an
opportunity to connect space-related research and a customer group that might
not otherwise be thinking about it, like biotech and pharmaceutical companies,"
Kohler said. "We can connect these kinds of opportunities to the
international space station."
The partnership brings
more than just money. As part of the agreement, Spacehab research can be
conducted at Florida's Space Life Sciences Laboratory, a $30 million facility
at Cape Canaveral. The lab can provide ground control and data transmission for
on-orbit experiments and pre- and post-flight integration, Kohler said.
Royston said the
partnership opens access to Florida's research institutes, large pharmaceutical
companies and universities.
"The value of the
partnership is immeasurable for what it brings," Royston said.