| Literature DB >> 32154251 |
Peta Bradbury1, Hanjie Wu2, Jung Un Choi3, Alan E Rowan3, Hongyu Zhang4, Kate Poole5, Jan Lauko3, Joshua Chou2.
Abstract
A lack of gravity experienced during space flight has been shown to have profound effects on human physiology including muscle atrophy, reductions in bone density and immune function, and endocrine disorders. At present, these physiological changes present major obstacles to long-term space missions. What is not clear is which pathophysiological disruptions reflect changes at the cellular level versus changes that occur due to the impact of weightlessness on the entire body. This review focuses on current research investigating the impact of microgravity at the cellular level including cellular morphology, proliferation, and adhesion. As direct research in space is currently cost prohibitive, we describe here the use of microgravity simulators for studies at the cellular level. Such instruments provide valuable tools for cost-effective research to better discern the impact of weightlessness on cellular function. Despite recent advances in understanding the relationship between extracellular forces and cell behavior, very little is understood about cellular biology and mechanotransduction under microgravity conditions. This review will examine recent insights into the impact of simulated microgravity on cell biology and how this technology may provide new insight into advancing our understanding of mechanically driven biology and disease.Entities:
Keywords: cytoskeletal; mechanobiology; mechanosensing; mechanotransduction; microgravity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32154251 PMCID: PMC7047162 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2020.00096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
FIGURE 1The morphology and physiology alterations of adherently growing cells after microgravity exposure. Cytoskeleton components of actin, microtubules and intermediate filament are displayed in inset circles. In adherent cells, microtubules form radiation arrangement near nuclear. Actin fibers anchor to cell membranes. Intermediate filament forms loose network around nuclear. Among cells under microgravity influence, the microtubules are shortened and curved. Less actin fibers but more condense intermediate filament are observed. This illustration was inspired by long-term thyroid cells culture in simulated microgravity environment (Kopp et al., 2015; Krüger et al., 2019a).
Effects of sub-cellular functions concerning various cell types and exposure duration in microgravity environment.
| Osteosarcoma cells (ROS 17/2.8) | Cell morphological change to rounded shape with long cytoplasmic extensions | 4 days and 6 days | |
| Osteosarcoma cells (ROS 17/2.8) | Reduction in cell spread area and vinculin spot area, actin and focal adhesion, and stress fibers | 12 and 24 h | |
| Breast cancer (MCF-7) | Disoriented microtubule | 1.5 h | |
| Thyroid cancer (ML-1) | Actin fiber reorganization | Parabola flight | |
| Human macrophages | No effect on cytoskeletal structure | 11 days | |
| Human chondrocytes | Effect on cell cytoplasm, microtubule network disruption, loss of stress fibers, actin fiber reorganization. | Parabola flight | |
| Osteoblasts (MC3T3-E1) | Reduction in actin cytoskeletal stress fibers and reduction of nuclei size by 30% | 4 days | |
| Primary mouse osteoblasts | Thicker microtubule, smaller focal adhesion spots, reduction in actin stress fibers, and increase in cell spread area | 5 days | |
| Osteocytes | Increase in cellular organelles including Golgi complex, vacuoles, and vesicles | 14 days |