Gravitational Biology

Exploring Plant Responses To Altered Gravity For Advancing Space Agriculture

By Keith Cowing
Status Report
Plant Communications
July 14, 2025
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Exploring Plant Responses To Altered Gravity For Advancing Space Agriculture
Impacts of microgravity on plants (A) At the phenotypic level, plants exhibit random root growth direction, larger branch and silique angles, delayed flowering, and smaller seed size. (B) At the cellular level, plants in microgravity show dispersed amyloplasts, enhanced cell proliferation, and thinner, less rigid cell walls. (C) Omics analyses reveal alterations in several signaling pathways under microgravity, including those related to the cell wall, stress responses, reactive oxygen species, and epigenetic regulation. — Plant Communications

Plants are vital to human space exploration, providing oxygen, food, and psychological benefits to astronauts while contributing to water regeneration by recycling organic waste.

However, microgravity, or reduced gravity, in space presents a considerable environmental challenge to plant growth. Understanding plant biology under both gravity and microgravity conditions is critical for advancing space exploration.

In recent years, substantial progress has been made in understanding how gravity affects plants and its implications for future space agriculture, although a more comprehensive review is still needed.

This review provides an overview of technological platforms used to simulate and study microgravity effects, detailing their historical background and key characteristics.

It also summarizes recent advances in understanding plant gravitropism, including critical steps such as gravity sensing, signal transduction, and curvature response. The impacts of microgravity on plants are examined at phenotypic, cellular, and molecular levels. Studies on plant biology in microgravity have greatly expanded our knowledge, laying the foundation for the future of space agriculture and exploration.

Additionally, we discuss agricultural systems designed for space, focusing on bioregenerative life-support systems, selection and breeding of plants suited for space environments, and their potential applications. Finally, we highlight the challenges and future research directions in plant biology and space agricultural systems.

Exploring plant responses to altered gravity for advancing space agriculture, Plant Communications via PubMed

Astrobiology, Space Biology,

Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA Space Station Payload manager/space biologist, Away Teams, Journalist, Lapsed climber, Synaesthete, Na’Vi-Jedi-Freman-Buddhist-mix, ASL, Devon Island and Everest Base Camp veteran, (he/him) 🖖🏻