
Many people associate
Years ago, Kasthuri Venkateswaran, a scientist who decontaminates spacecraft bound for
That discovery led to sending a specimen to the
The research was shelved, and a sample of the microbe literally went into a freezer. But 25 years after its first detection, a Massachusetts-based company is using it to make a new ingredient for sunscreen, leveraging its
The story of spaceship to skincare has twists and turns and an unusual cast of characters. It starts with Kyle Landry, who began his career in food science. Landry developed an expertise in extremophiles — organisms that can live in the harshest Earth environments — and even discovered a new species of fungus.
Landry had been focused on finding new and unique enzymes from certain funguses that grow at high temperatures. When added to foods, these ingredients help produce
David Sinclair,
From there, Landry started working for

Credit: NASA
The contractor eventually started working with NASA to develop compounds that could protect the human genome from the harmful effects of
“It’s not the rockets that are limiting us from going to Mars,” Landry said. “It’s our own biology to withstand nonstop radiation for six months.”
The partnership put Landry at the right place at the right time to learn about NASA’s treasure trove of extremophiles, ripe for more research and commercialization. At the space agency’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, scientists have discovered hundreds of these hardy little lifeforms while

Credit: NASA
To comply, NASA has sought to sanitize Mars rovers at a threshold of no more than 300,000 bacterial spores on any surface area exposed to the Martian environment. That process has revealed
Venkateswaran has been
“We know there’s life on Mars already because we sent it there,” he said then.

Credit: Delavie Sciences
Venkateswaran’s other reason for saving extremophile samples is to learn how to improve cleaning methods. The strain of bacillus pumilus, for example, was used as a final witness for the eradication of everything else in that cleanroom, said Dan Lockney, executive of NASA’s technology transfer program.
“If that bacteria was eliminated,” he said, “they determined that that cleanroom was as sanitized as possible.”
“If that bacteria was eliminated they determined that that cleanroom was as sanitized as possible.”
Now for how the bacteria ended up in the sunscreen business.

Credit: Delavie Sciences
NASA urged Landry to take a look at its catalog of
“We endeavor to make sure all the things that we develop for these space missions also find their way into consumer goods and industrial applications and manufacturing processes and into hospitals and grocery stores,” Lockney said.
Seeing that a biodefense company doesn’t have a place in cosmetics, Landry formed a spinoff company, called
By now it’s pretty much common knowledge that sunscreen is the best way to reduce skin damage from

Credit: Kyle Landry
Sunscreens are
Delavie Sciences has also launched its own brand of skincare products, called Aeonia, using its version of bacillus lysate for another application. The ingredient seems to activate skin cells’ own production of
Like Willy Wonka looking for the next exotic chocolate flavor, Landry now goes on oil rigs and in abandoned gold mines hunting for new biology that could become the next big thing in extremophiles. But he emphasizes that his business wouldn’t have been possible without NASA.
“People think NASA is just rockets and satellites and freeze-dried ice cream,” he said. “There’s so much more that comes to us from NASA that goes under the radar.”