| Literature DB >> 22666312 |
Ranieri Cancedda1, Yi Liu, Alessandra Ruggiu, Sara Tavella, Roberta Biticchi, Daniela Santucci, Silvia Schwartz, Paolo Ciparelli, Giancarlo Falcetti, Chiara Tenconi, Vittorio Cotronei, Salvatore Pignataro.
Abstract
The Italian Space Agency, in line with its scientific strategies and the National Utilization Plan for the International Space Station (ISS), contracted Thales Alenia Space Italia to design and build a spaceflight payload for rodent research on ISS: the Mice Drawer System (MDS). The payload, to be integrated inside the Space Shuttle middeck during transportation and inside the Express Rack in the ISS during experiment execution, was designed to function autonomously for more than 3 months and to involve crew only for maintenance activities. In its first mission, three wild type (Wt) and three transgenic male mice over-expressing pleiotrophin under the control of a bone-specific promoter (PTN-Tg) were housed in the MDS. At the time of launch, animals were 2-months old. MDS reached the ISS on board of Shuttle Discovery Flight 17A/STS-128 on August 28(th), 2009. MDS returned to Earth on November 27(th), 2009 with Shuttle Atlantis Flight ULF3/STS-129 after 91 days, performing the longest permanence of mice in space. Unfortunately, during the MDS mission, one PTN-Tg and two Wt mice died due to health status or payload-related reasons. The remaining mice showed a normal behavior throughout the experiment and appeared in excellent health conditions at landing. During the experiment, the mice health conditions and their water and food consumption were daily checked. Upon landing mice were sacrificed, blood parameters measured and tissues dissected for subsequent analysis. To obtain as much information as possible on microgravity-induced tissue modifications, we organized a Tissue Sharing Program: 20 research groups from 6 countries participated. In order to distinguish between possible effects of the MDS housing conditions and effects due to the near-zero gravity environment, a ground replica of the flight experiment was performed at the University of Genova. Control tissues were collected also from mice maintained on Earth in standard vivarium cages.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22666312 PMCID: PMC3362598 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0032243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1The Mice Drawer System Flight Model.
Pre-flight operations.
| Day to launch | Activities (animal training and mds payload set up for launch) |
| −24 | Arriving of 15 Wt and 15 PTN-Tg mice at SLSL and transfer of the animals to isolator cages. |
| −22 | Transfer of 7 Wt and 7 PTN-Tg mice to the training cages. |
| −11 | Transfer of 6 Wt and and 6 PTN-Tg trained to the Flight (FM) and the Spare (FS) MDS modules (3 Wt and 3 Tg to each module). |
| −11/−6 | Daily check of the models subsystems and of the health status of animals inside the FM and FS MDS modules. |
| −5 | Replacement of the waste filter. Filling of the water system. Insertion of food bars. Transport of FM MDS to the launch pad to be installed on the Discovery orbiter middeck. Check of the health status of animals inside the FM and FS MDS modules. |
| −4 | Return of the FM MDS module to SLSL due to a 72 hours scrub. Removal of the mice from FM MDS, refurbishment of the FM module as new spare payload and reinsertion of the animals. |
| −2 | Transport of original FS MDS module to the launch pad to be installed on the Discovery orbiter middeck. |
| 0 | Launch of Shuttle Discovery with STS-128 crew on August 28th, 2009 at 11.58 p.m. (EDT) |
Activities begun on August 4th, 2009. Acronyms reported in Table 1 are explained in Table S3.
Figure 2Body weight.
Body weight increase of the flight mice and of the ground and vivarium control mice during the 91-day MDS experiment. Panel A): Wt mice; Panel B): PTN-Tg mice.