Cedars-Sinai and Exobiosphere Launch Space Biomedical Research on Vast's Haven-1

December 8, 2025
Cedars-Sinai and Exobiosphere Launch Space Biomedical Research on Vast's Haven-1
  • Exobiosphere’s platform is designed to remove barriers for scientists by delivering data faster, with greater consistency and scale that is feasible in orbit, while also boosting terrestrial lab productivity.

  • Researchers will study how microgravity affects organoid growth to model diseases and test drugs, potentially revealing faster growth or different development in space.

  • Experiments will be conducted aboard Haven-1 to explore how reduced gravity influences organoid development.

  • Cedars-Sinai is partnering with Exobiosphere to conduct biomedical research aboard Haven-1, Vast’s planned commercial space station, with a focus on organoid growth in microgravity using automated hardware.

  • The research aims to identify therapies for astronaut health issues—bone and muscle loss, heart and immune system degradation—with potential terrestrial applications for conditions like sarcopenia, osteoporosis, and cardiomyopathy.

  • Cedars-Sinai Accelerator+ and Cedars-Sinai Technology Ventures have backed Exobiosphere with a $1.4 million investment and ongoing mentorship to bring space-based bioscience research to market.

  • The collaboration builds on Cedars-Sinai work showing surface tension in 96-well plates can retain contents in microgravity, enabling ground-based hardware to be used in space research and democratizing life sciences.

  • The collaboration aims to accelerate biomedical research in space and translate findings to Earth, leveraging Exobiosphere’s compact, automated platform for organoid experimentation.

  • Exobiosphere provides a six-plate, compact automated system for space-based organoid work, featuring precision liquid handling, environmental control, robotic manipulation, live imaging, an incubator, and a robotic arm.

  • The platform integrates six 96-well plates with built-in incubator, microfluidic liquid dispenser, plate reader, and robotic arm, optimized for microgravity and Earth-based lab efficiency.

  • Spokespeople emphasize advancing space biomedicine and translating space research into Earth-based healthcare, with potential long-term impacts on therapies for astronauts and patients.

Summary based on 2 sources


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