Mission SpaceX CRS-16 RRRM-1 space flight induced skin genomic plasticity via an epigenetic trigger
Kanhaiya Singh, Priyanka Verma, Rajneesh Srivastava, Yashika Rustagi, Manishekhar Kumar, Sumit S. Verma, Sujit Mohanty, Afshin Beheshti, Liz Warren, Chandan K. Sen

Abstract
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsSpaceflight effects on biology · Space Exploration and Technology
Main text
(iScience 27, 111382; December 20, 2024)
In the originally published version of this article, there were typographical errors the name of the space mission. “CRS-19” has been replaced with “CRS-16” throughout the manuscript.
Specific titles and a line of text in the original article:
- •The title (in main and supplementary information) was originally “Mission SpaceX CRS-19 RRRM-1 space flight induced skin genomic plasticity via an epigenetic trigger”
- •A line in the “Skin samples from mice” subsection of the STAR Methods originally read “These mice belonged to the SpaceX CRS-19 Rodent Research-8 mission [also known as Rodent Research Reference Mission-1 (RRRM-1)] were procured from ISS National Laboratory in collaboration with Dr. Liz Warren.”
- •The title within the Figure 360 Figure Viewer was originally “Mission SpaceX CRS-19 RRRM-1 space flight induced skin genomic plasticity via an epigenetic trigger”
Revised, these now read:
- •“Mission SpaceX CRS-16 RRRM-1 space flight induced skin genomic plasticity via an epigenetic trigger”
- •“These mice belonged to the SpaceX CRS-16 Rodent Research-8 mission [also known as Rodent Research Reference Mission-1 (RRRM-1)] and were procured from ISS National Laboratory in collaboration with Dr. Liz Warren.”
- •“Mission SpaceX CRS-16 RRRM-1 space flight induced skin genomic plasticity via an epigenetic trigger”
All authors agree to the correction and confirm that this does not impact the scientific conclusions of the paper.
