The International Space Station lacks microbial diversity. Is it too clean?

Tests reveal a lack of microbial diversity on board. That’s been linked to health issues in other settings

image of astronaut cleaning space station

Astronauts aboard the International Space Station routinely clean up. Here, Japanese astronaut Aki Hoshide vacuums in one of the lab areas.

NASA Johnson/Flickr (CC BY-NC 2.0)

With air filters and weekly wipe-downs and vacuuming, NASA goes to great lengths to keep the International Space Station clean so that astronauts stay healthy. But astronauts still often experience health problems like immune dysfunction, skin rashes and other inflammatory conditions. One reason may be because the ISS might be too clean, a new study suggests.

Microbes, tiny living organisms like bacteria and viruses, play an important role in human health. But samples of surfaces in the ISS reflect a striking lack of microbial diversity, Rodolfo Salido Benítez, a bioengineer at University of California, San Diego, and colleagues report February 27 in Cell

Astronauts swabbed surfaces in the kitchen, bathroom, dining space and other areas on the ISS. They then sent the 803 samples to Benitez and colleagues for analysis. 

The ISS has lower microbial diversity than most buildings on Earth. And nearly all of those microbes come from humans and building materials, while less than 0.3 percent are from natural environmental sources like soil and water. Like most indoor environments on Earth, the vast majority of microbes originate from human skin.

Inside and outside the body, microbes compete for resources and space, so maintaining a diverse set keeps any one of them from taking over and causing an health problems.  Low microbial diversity in hospitals, for example, leads to a higher risk of infection. Even the microbes in your house can affect your health. One study found that Amish communities have a lower risk of asthma than other communities with similar lifestyles because their household dust contains microbes from farm animals.

a bag of sampling devices on the space station, Earth in background
A bag full of custom-made sampling devices used to collect surface swabs throughout the International Space Station floats in the cupola, an observing area for activities outside the station. NASA

“If we’re outside, we’re generally exposed to a lot more microbial diversity from touching animals or soil,” says Sean Gibbons, a microbiome researcher at the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle. “When we’re inside, these walls, these surfaces are acting like mirrors. They’re essentially reflecting back upon us our own microbial diversity.”

Maintaining a healthy diversity of microbes in confined spaces will be a growing concern as astronauts spend more time in space and new missions begin. Scientists will need to test new ways of adding more “good germs” to the mix, like bringing animals aboard or stocking the ISS pantry with fermented foods, says Pieter Dorrestein, a chemical biologist at UC San Diego.

“The reality is that we’re going to inhabit space at some point, so this work will give us the first insight in terms of the things that we need to add and remove,” Dorrestein says. “The most important message that we can pass on is how important is to not only look at what’s present, but also what’s absent.”