Space colony: Sperm survives microgravity, but no space babies soon

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Frozen sperm samples can remain viable after exposure to microgravity conditions that are somewhat similar to those found in space, new research reveals.

The findings suggests that at least one obstacle on the path towards space-based reproduction may not be insurmountable.

Sperm survives microgravity, Microgravity sperm experiment suggests babies can be born in space, scientists say
Sperm survives microgravity. Good news for space colonists! Picture via Shutterstock.com

However, the study doesn’t actually demonstrate how sperm would fare in space, and even if they did, we are still light-years away from making space babies using frozen sperm.

Baby space colonists?

Sex in space would be difficult and dangerous for a lot of reasons. There are the obvious mechanical challenges and the tremendous threat to a developing embryo posed by cosmic radiation.

Microgravity also dramatically impairs the circulatory, respiratory and reproductive systems. As a result, scientists are looking to artificial reproduction as the primary means of populating hypothetical colonies beyond Earth, said Montserrat Boada, director of an embryology laboratory at Dexeus Mujer, a women’s health center in Barcelona, Spain, and one of the researchers involved in the study.

Such research is necessary because moving conception from the spacesuit to the test tube will only solve some of the many, many problems inherent in reproduction beyond Earth’s atmosphere.

For instance, scientists still have no idea how spaceflight will affect the prenatal development of any eventual baby space colonists.

Microgravity affects molecular and cell structure,” said Boada. “There are many studies published in the animal model and other tissues and cells in humans, but little is known about the effects of different gravitational environments on gametes, eggs and embryos.

The research

To better understand how microgravity affects sperm, Boada collaborated with microgravity engineers from the Polytechnic University of Barcelona and members of an aero club for amateur flyers in Spain.

The researchers collected samples from 10 healthy volunteers and froze them, using techniques commonly employed in earthbound fertility treatments. The experimental samples were strapped into a two-seat aerobatic aircraft, or a heavier-than-air craft designed for performing hair-raising maneuvers that aren’t normally performed during flight. The samples were taken for a wild ride that included about 20 parabolic maneuvers, which exposed the samples to gravitational conditions ranging from space-like microgravity to gravitational forces that were two to three times as strong as those experienced on Earth.

We have chosen aerobatic flight because it has been proven effective” in simulating the effect of spaceflight, Boada said.

After the flights, the researchers thawed the samples and compared the sperm to control samples that had been stored on the ground. The scientists assessed sperm viability by measuring seven characteristics, including sperm motility and DNA fragmentation.

It seems there is no alteration of frozen human sperm samples after exposure to microgravity,” Boada said.

Many open questions

While these findings are encouraging, the results from this type of pilot study are far from definitive.

This conclusion fails to consider the realities of sperm bank requirements for use in safe human reproduction, nor the realities of the space flight conditions under chronic exposure to microgravity and space flight radiation,” said Joseph Tash, an emeritus professor at the University of Kansas Medical Center.

The parabolic maneuvers used in the study caused rapid, alternating changes in gravitational force that “are not experienced in prolonged true space flight,” Tash told LiveScience.

Tash is leading a NASA study that seeks to answer similar questions, using samples from the International Space Station. Those results will be presented at a scientific meeting in November, Tash said.

The effect of microgravity is just one of many hurdles researchers must clear before safe human reproduction beyond earth becomes technically feasible.

Among the other challenges researchers must confront are finding ways to mitigate the effect of solar radiation on gametes, fertilized eggs, developing fetuses and mothers, Tash said.

Space colony is on its way… And according to these last scientific results could be soon viable!

[results, The Independent, LiveScience]

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