Kate Rubins

Astronaut, NASA Johnson Space Center

Kate Rubins was selected by NASA in 2009.  Rubins completed her first spaceflight on Expedition 48/49, where she became the first person to sequence DNA in space. She holds a Bachelor of Science in Molecular Biology from the University of California, San Diego and a Ph.D. in Cancer Biology from Stanford University Medical School Biochemistry Department and Microbiology and Immunology Department.  Dr. Rubins conducted her undergraduate research on HIV-1 integration in the Infectious Diseases Laboratory at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.  She worked as a Fellow/Principal Investigator at the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research and headed 14 researchers studying viral diseases that primarily affect Central and West Africa. Rubins most recently served aboard the International Space Station as flight engineer for Expedition 63/64. Across her two flights, she has spent a total of 300 days in space, the fourth most days in space by a U.S. female astronaut, and performed four spacewalks.

Speaker Sessions

Space with Kate Rubins

Major Kate Rubins is an astronaut who got her start as a molecular biologist. She participated in two missions to the international space station, working as a scientist and engineer in space. Rubins orchestrated the first sequencing of DNA in space. Find out why that matters.

Space: Biotech’s Next Frontier

Recent projects are focused on mapping the microbial metagenome of the space station, which involves taking around 1000 samples of the station. Catriona Jamieson, a hematologist and director of the Sanford Stem Cell Institute has sent tumors and stem cells aboard private spaceflights like SpaceX CRS-24 and the recent Axiom-3 mission to be studied in the International Space Station.