Today, PCA SKINĀ®, a Colgate-Palmolive Company brand, announced plans to send the first-ever private sector skin health experiment to the International Space Station (ISS). The experiment, sponsored by the ISS National Lab, will explore the effects of microgravity on skin-related genes as the biomarkers used to evaluate overall skin health in an effort to guide future product innovations and technologies.
The experiment will travel to the ISS aboard Northrop Grummanās 17th commercial resupply services mission, contracted by NASA, in its Cygnus spacecraft no earlier than February 19, 2022 from NASAās Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia.
āWe know from historical data that space travel and lengthy exposure to microgravity have profound effects on the skin. Astronauts in space experience thinning, dry skin that is susceptible to cuts. While these changes are comparable to those observed during the normal aging process on Earth, it appears that they are accelerated in microgravity,ā said Lia Arvanitidou, Global Technology and Design Vice President for Colgate-Palmoliveās skin health businesses. āThrough this exciting endeavor, weāll be able to gather new data on the skin health biomarkers behind those changes – data which will be available faster than it would be on Earth,ā said Arvanitidou.
For 30 years, PCA SKINĀ® has pioneered and perfected the science of skin health to improve peopleās lives. Developing transformative solutions backed by science is an important part of the brandās mission and vision, which support Colgate-Palmoliveās purpose to reimagine a healthier future for all. With this experiment, the brand hopes to find ways to better identify areas for early intervention in skin health and, ultimately, help guide the development of groundbreaking skincare innovations across all of C-Pās skincare brands – PCA SKINĀ®, EltaMD, and Filorga.
To conduct the experiment on the ISS, Colgate-Palmolive scientists partnered with BioServe Space Technologies, an ISS National Lab implementation partner that specializes in engineering space-based life science investigations to develop a custom device, containing live, lab-grown skin samples from MatTek Life Sciences. The samples will be exposed to the microgravity environment aboard the ISS for a set number of days and then frozen until they are returned to Earth. Once the samples return to our lab, investigators will compare findings to those observed in matching control experiments conducted on the ground.
The experiment is Colgate-Palmoliveās second research project to be conducted in collaboration with the ISS National Lab. āWe are committed to exploring new pathways to innovation that help our customers feel their best. We are confident that our collaboration with the ISS National Lab will give us valuable insights to inform our work as a result-driven, professional-grade skincare company deeply rooted in science and skin health,ā said Arvanitidou.
To learn more on PCA SKINās latest innovations, visit PCASKIN.com.
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