Spaceflight introduces environmental stressors that can alter human microbiomes and immune responses. We analyzed 259 biospecimens from six astronauts across two commercial ISS missions: Axiom 2 (10-day mission) and Axiom 3 (21-day mission). Samples included saliva, stool, urine, and body swabs from 10 anatomical sites, profiled via 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequencing. Gut and oral microbiomes remained stable, while skin-associated communities exhibited transient diversity shifts post-flight. Taxonomic analysis revealed individual and site-specific patterns as well as a possible microbial acquisition from the ISS/space-flight environment and microbiome exclusivity. Cytokine profiling from single cell data indicated immune activation, with IL-32 and IL-16 elevated in Axiom 2 and Axiom 3, coinciding with microbial changes. These findings provide an integrated view of microbiome individuality, exclusivity and immune dynamics during two short-duration commercial spaceflights of three weeks, informing strategies for crew health on future long-duration missions.
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