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South Korean team prepares BioCabinet payload for space biology research on Nuri rocket mission
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South Korean team prepares BioCabinet payload for space biology research on Nuri rocket mission

by Riko Seibo
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Nov 26, 2025

Chan Hum Park and his research team from Hallym University Chuncheon Sacred Heart Hospital are sending their BioCabinet payload into orbit aboard the fourth Nuri rocket flight on November 27, launching alongside the Next-Generation Medium Satellite-3.

BioCabinet is a research platform featuring a bio 3D printer and an incubator for stem cell differentiation. It will fabricate artificial heart tissue and assess disease responses in space, with planned operation for 60 days and the capability to extend to one year.

The payload contains two modules: one for monitoring the contraction and beating of cardiac tissue produced from induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes, and another for studying blood vessel differentiation using tonsil-derived stem cells for experiments both in space and on Earth.

The BioCabinet experiment will collect data critical for organ fabrication and cardiovascular research under space conditions, marking the first time South Korea acquires biological tissue data in low gravity and under environmental factors including pressure, temperature, and radiation.

In microgravity, cells naturally form 3D structures, overcoming the limitations experienced on Earth and enabling the production of higher purity drug crystals. Cardiac tissue beating data from this mission may support future cardiovascular drug development.

Professor Park's team continues to expand their space bioengineering research platform. Upcoming projects include BioRexs, a drug screening module targeting glioblastoma for a planned 2027 launch, and BioLiv, aimed at producing artificial liver tissue in space to be returned to Earth for transplantation, marking what could be the first non-clinical study with space-manufactured organs.

Additional platforms under development include BioFactory, BioDeep, BioLunar, and BioMars.

Professor Park stated, "Conducting research in outer space is not about pursuing short-term profit - it is about creating technologies that shape the future." He described the BioCabinet mission as Korea's entry point into space-based bioengineering and the foundation for the country's biological tissue 3D printing studies.

Related Links
Hallym University Chuncheon Sacred Heart Hospital
Microsat News and Nanosat News at SpaceMart.com

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