NASA Highlights Winners of Challenge to Engineer Human Tissue
NASA will announce the first- and second-place winners of the Vascular Tissue Challenge, a prize competition to grow and sustain functioning human tissue in a lab. Experts will answer questions about the teams’ tissue engineering techniques during a special episode of NASA Science Live and media briefing.
The NASA Science Live episode will air on NASA Television, the NASA app, the agency’s website, the NASA Facebook, NASA Twitter and NASA YouTube channels. Viewers can submit questions on social media platforms using #AskNASA.
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The Vascular Tissue Challenge is a competition to increase the pace of bioengineering innovations to benefit humans on Earth and future space explorers. Researchers attempted to create lab-grown human tissues for a thick-walled organ – like the heart, lung, liver, or kidney – and keep it alive and functioning during a trial period.
The first team to demonstrate tissue survival and function for the duration of a 30-day trial will receive $300,000. The first-place team also will have the opportunity to advance its research on the International Space Station U.S. National Laboratory. The next two teams that successfully complete trails will win $100,000 each.
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Teleconference participants will include:
- Jim Reuter, associate administrator for NASA’s Space Technology Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters.
- Robyn Gatens, director of the International Space Station at Headquarters.
- Monsi Roman, Centennial Challenges manager at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
- Lynn Harper, challenge administrator and lead of integrative studies at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley.
- Representatives from the winning teams.
- Michael Roberts, interim chief scientist at the Center for the Advancement of Science in Space (manager of the International Space Station U.S. National Laboratory) and judge for the Vascular Tissue Challenge.
The Vascular Tissue Challenge, a NASA Centennial Challenge, began in 2016 and has engaged teams of problem solvers from the public, industry, and academia to help push the boundaries of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. On Earth and in space, improved lab-grown vascularized tissue could be used for better disease modeling and could accelerate related research for organ transplants, as well as development of new therapeutics for long-term deep space missions.
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