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Milton Students
Launch Second Project to Travel on Shuttle Columbia |
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Date Posted:
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June 3, 2002
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A team of seven sophomores has been working since February on the
second Milton Academy microgravity experiment to travel on board
shuttle Columbia. Their experiment will be aboard Columbia STS-107,
scheduled to lift off July 19, 2002 from the Kennedy Space Center
in Florida.
The first step in the process was a brainstorming session to identify
an experiment. This was perhaps the most challenging step, since
the experiment must comply with strict NASA limitations for space
and materials for the DMDA apparatus, (dual materials dispersion
apparatus), that a team uses in their experiment. Microbiology experiments
are easily adapted to the DMDA. The Milton STS-107 experiment involves
testing the effects of microgravity on antibiotic resistance on
bacteria. Milton students began working on this experiment in February.
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The second step in this research involves testing antibiotic resistance
of the bacteria on terra firma at Milton Academy. At present the
team is testing the bacteria, (E. coli strain MM294), against an
antibiotic screen, (kanamycin), to determine the level and or rate
of resistance in the E. coli. The MM 294 E. coli is a laboratory
safe strain of the bacteria that poses no threat to humans. Moreover,
the students working on the experiment are required to use strict
aseptic technique that demands sterile treatment of work surfaces
and equipment with proper disposal protocols for contaminated materials.
Ground based testing at Milton will be completed before the team
travels to Kennedy Space Center this July to assist in the loading
of our experiment on the DMDA. STS-107 is scheduled to be in space
for 16 days. During that time the team will grow the MM294 in nutrient
broth. At the end of the recovery, technicians will send the team's
bacteria back to Milton. This microgravity MM294 will then be used
for step three, which is testing the microgravity MM294 against
antibiotic screens to determine their rate and/or level of antibiotic
resistance. Milton's ground based testing and subsequent testing
with the microgravity MM294 will be done using identical protocols.
This experiment does have potential implications for continuing
human work in space. If the Milton team discovers that MM294 bacteria
exposed to microgravity express a higher rate and/or level of antibiotic
resistance then this would warrant further research to confirm these
results. Confirmation that exposure to microgravity increases antibiotic
resistance in bacteria may for example lead to stricter hygiene
procedures for cleaning spacecraft or the inclusion of antibiotics
in routine health protocols for astronauts on extended space flight.
The team of students currently doing work on this project include
Nathaniel Dean 04, Dina Guzovsky 04 Greg Kantrowitz
04, Alyssa King 04, Scott Montejunas 04, Rachel
Newman '04 and Nick Werner 04. Ned Bean is the faculty advisor.
In 1998 Milton Academy sent up their first microgravity experiment
on the heralded STS-95 mission that carried astronaut John Glenn
back into space. This experiment was a crystal growth experiment
that involved testing the effects of microgravity on growing potassium
chromium aluminum sulfate crystals by osmotic dewatering. The results
of this first experiment were highly successful thanks to the efforts
of Milton alums, Adrina DeVitre 01, Jessica Tooker 01, Chris
Rodriguez 01 and Nathan Bliss 01.

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