Litcius/Paper detail

Biofilms: from the cradle of life to life support

Katherine J. Baxter, Eszter Sas, Kevin B. Clark, Michaela Walsh, Nikhil Pradeep, Alavia Batool, Charles Naney, Miguel Angel Vargas Cruz, Niamh Kennerdale, Kajari Das, Zhihan Shi, Anish Kelam, Vandana Verma, Marta Filipa Simões, Dirk Neefs, Vinothkannan Ravichandran, Madhan R. Tirumalai, Borja Barbero Barcenilla, Guerrino Macori, Emmanuel Gonzalez, Benjamin A. Sikes, Fathi Karouia, Nicholas J. B. Brereton

2026npj Biofilms and Microbiomes7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Biofilms are intricately associated with life on Earth, enabling functions essential to human and plant systems, but their susceptibility to spaceflight stressors and functional disruption in space remains incompletely understood. During spaceflight, biofilms have largely been considered as potential infrastructure, life support or infection risks. This review focuses on the prevailing beneficial roles of biofilms in human and plant health, and examines evidence of biofilm adaptability in space environments.

Topics & Concepts

Life support systemAdaptabilityHuman lifePlant lifeSpaceflightBiofilmSpace (punctuation)StressorBiologyHuman spaceflightLongevityOrganismEcologyRisk analysis (engineering)Life supportAdaptation (eye)EngineeringFunction (biology)Environmental ethicsSpaceflight effects on biologyIndoor Air Quality and Microbial ExposureBacterial biofilms and quorum sensing