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Experiment on ISS may help create AIDS drugs — Roscosmos

Previously, coronavirus proteins were grown on the ISS
International Space Station NASA
International Space Station
© NASA

MOSCOW, June 24. /TASS/. The results of the Kristallizator (Crystallizer) experiment on the International Space Station may help create new drugs for the treatment of tuberculosis and AIDS, Russia’s space corporation Roscosmos said in a news release on Friday.

"Space rocket corporation Energia spokesman Dmitry Pasyshin has reviewed the results of a materials processing experiment, staged in space. More than 100 spatial structures of proteins were analyzed, which will help develop drugs for the treatment of tuberculosis and AIDS," Roscosmos said in its Telegram channel following a meeting of the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Council. 

During the meeting, the deputy director of the RAS Space Research Institute, Yevgeny Lupyan, speculated that if Russia and China pooled efforts in the remote sensing of the Earth, they might be able to create a group of satellites comparable in capabilities to those at the disposal of the US and the EU.

Previously, coronavirus proteins were grown on the ISS. The obtained samples will be used to decipher the structure of the proteins and study the mechanisms of how viruses enter the human body. The research results will be used to develop antiviral drugs.