Space Travel Wakes Up Human ‘Dark Genome’ – And That’s Bad News

UC San Diego study finds stem cells from ISS missions age rapidly and activate harmful ancient viral DNA sequences

Al Landes Avatar
Al Landes Avatar

By

Our editorial process is built on human expertise, ensuring that every article is reliable and trustworthy. AI helps us shape our content to be as accurate and engaging as possible.
Learn more about our commitment to integrity in our Code of Ethics.

Image credit: Wikimedia

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Spaceflight activates dormant viral DNA segments causing accelerated cellular aging within 32-45 days
  • Blood stem cells lose 80% dormancy time, showing pre-leukemic inflammatory stress patterns
  • Stem cells recover function after Earth return but require up to one year

Human cells harbor ancient viral DNA that’s been dormant for millennia, but spaceflight just figured out how to wake it up. New research from UC San Diego reveals that human stem cells exposed to space conditions don’t just age faster—they activate what scientists call the “dark genome,” dormant DNA segments that wreak havoc when stirred from their slumber.

The discovery came from AI-monitored bioreactors the size of cellphones, sent to the International Space Station across four SpaceX missions between 2021 and 2023.

Blood-forming stem cells that should spend 80% of their time in energy-saving dormancy instead became hyperactive workhorses, burning through their reserves like a smartphone with every app running simultaneously.

Within 32 to 45 days, these cellular powerhouses showed classic aging markers:

  • Shortened telomeres
  • DNA damage
  • Inflammatory stress that resembled patterns seen in pre-leukemic patients

These findings are critically important because they show that the stressors of space—like microgravity and cosmic galactic radiation—can accelerate the molecular aging of blood stem cells, The implications stretch beyond cellular biology into mission planning territory.

The immune system depends on these stem cells to generate fresh blood and immune cells—exhaust them, and long-duration missions to Mars become significantly riskier propositions.

The silver lining? Preliminary data suggest stem cells can recover much of their function after returning to Earth, though full recovery takes up to a year. Researchers are now exploring pharmaceutical countermeasures and pre-flight screening tools that could protect astronauts while advancing our understanding of aging and disease treatment back home.

Space, it turns out, makes an excellent—if expensive—laboratory for studying what makes human cells tick.

Share this

At Gadget Review, our guides, reviews, and news are driven by thorough human expertise and use our Trust Rating system and the True Score. AI assists in refining our editorial process, ensuring that every article is engaging, clear and succinct. See how we write our content here →