Literature DB >> 11537184

From gravity and the organism to gravity and the cell.

A H Brown1.   

Abstract

This workshop on Gravity and the Cell was modeled on a 1968 conference on Gravity and the Organism. Each conference tried to identify the most salient scientific questions about how gravity is important to living systems. In the roughly two decades between the conferences there have been impressive advances in experimental methods, but the major scientific questions that have driven their applications to problems of gravitational biology, i.e., our broad research goals, remain much the same. In the case of plant research, improvements and extensions of biochemical techniques for investigating the ways organisms use environmental (g-force) information in salubrious ways has kept pace with progress in plant biochemistry. We now know much more about the roles of organic and inorganic substances that plants employ for information transfer and growth regulation and about the avenues and mechanisms for transport of those key substances within organisms. We have seen the acceptance of a "local control" concept that regulation of g-responses depends critically on plasmodesmata and gap junctions which allow plants and animals to throttle the transport of growth regulators across tissue boundaries often, especially in the case of plants, far removed from the morphological regions of concentration of statocytes that were once thought to be the exclusive bioaccelerometers used by plants. NASA's sponsorship of ground-based research in gravitational biology has served as important underpinning for orbital flight programs in space biology. The currently most noteworthy research area of ignorance is the mechanism by which the physical event of g-force susception becomes the biological process of g-force perception. Only rarely has it been possible to perform a definitive test of a theory of mechanism of gravity perception. Therefore, experimental research efforts in gravitational physiology still are essentially dependent on exploratory studies for which stimulus/response experiments require experimental manipulation of test subjects' g-force environment. Many research efforts have focused narrowly on contrasting the responses of test subjects to only two gravitational environments, 1 g versus real or simulated zero g. Much less effort has been devoted to studies at other g levels. For experiments in gravitational physiology three rotating machines have made, and no doubt will continue to make, important contributions: the centrifuge, the clinostat, and, most of all, the orbiting space vehicle. Some research trends, viewpoints, and shifts of emphasis are discussed.

Keywords:  NASA Discipline Number 00-00; NASA Discipline Plant Biology; NASA Program Flight; Non-NASA Center

Mesh:

Year:  1991        PMID: 11537184

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ASGSB Bull        ISSN: 0898-4697


  6 in total

1.  The therapeutic benefits of gravity in space and on earth.

Authors:  C Kourtidou-Papadeli; C L Papadelis; J Vernikos; P D Bamidis; M Hitoglou-Antoniadou; E Perantoni; E Vlachogiannis
Journal:  Hippokratia       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 0.471

Review 2.  Gravitational biology and space life sciences: current status and implications for the Indian space programme.

Authors:  P Dayanandan
Journal:  J Biosci       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 1.826

3.  Rapid adaptation to microgravity in mammalian macrophage cells.

Authors:  Cora S Thiel; Diane de Zélicourt; Svantje Tauber; Astrid Adrian; Markus Franz; Dana M Simmet; Kathrin Schoppmann; Swantje Hauschild; Sonja Krammer; Miriam Christen; Gesine Bradacs; Katrin Paulsen; Susanne A Wolf; Markus Braun; Jason Hatton; Vartan Kurtcuoglu; Stefanie Franke; Samuel Tanner; Samantha Cristoforetti; Beate Sick; Bertold Hock; Oliver Ullrich
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-02-27       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 4.  Gravitational Influence on Human Living Systems and the Evolution of Species on Earth.

Authors:  Konstantinos Adamopoulos; Dimitrios Koutsouris; Apostolos Zaravinos; George I Lambrou
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2021-05-08       Impact factor: 4.411

5.  Rapid coupling between gravitational forces and the transcriptome in human myelomonocytic U937 cells.

Authors:  Cora S Thiel; Svantje Tauber; Swantje Christoffel; Andreas Huge; Beatrice A Lauber; Jennifer Polzer; Katrin Paulsen; Hartwin Lier; Frank Engelmann; Burkhard Schmitz; Andreas Schütte; Christiane Raig; Liliana E Layer; Oliver Ullrich
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-09-05       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Rapid Cellular Perception of Gravitational Forces in Human Jurkat T Cells and Transduction into Gene Expression Regulation.

Authors:  Cora Sandra Thiel; Swantje Christoffel; Svantje Tauber; Christian Vahlensieck; Diane de Zélicourt; Liliana E Layer; Beatrice Lauber; Jennifer Polzer; Oliver Ullrich
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-01-14       Impact factor: 5.923

  6 in total

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