| Literature DB >> 32337251 |
Satoshi Furukawa1, Aiko Nagamatsu1, Mitsuru Nenoi2, Akira Fujimori2, Shizuko Kakinuma2, Takanori Katsube2, Bing Wang2, Chizuru Tsuruoka2, Toshiyuki Shirai2, Asako J Nakamura3, Asako Sakaue-Sawano4, Atsushi Miyawaki4, Hiroshi Harada5, Minoru Kobayashi5, Junya Kobayashi5, Takekazu Kunieda6, Tomoo Funayama7, Michiyo Suzuki7, Tatsuo Miyamoto8, Jun Hidema9,10, Yukari Yoshida11, Akihisa Takahashi11.
Abstract
Space travel has advanced significantly over the last six decades with astronauts spending up to 6 months at the International Space Station. Nonetheless, the living environment while in outer space is extremely challenging to astronauts. In particular, exposure to space radiation represents a serious potential long-term threat to the health of astronauts because the amount of radiation exposure accumulates during their time in space. Therefore, health risks associated with exposure to space radiation are an important topic in space travel, and characterizing space radiation in detail is essential for improving the safety of space missions. In the first part of this review, we provide an overview of the space radiation environment and briefly present current and future endeavors that monitor different space radiation environments. We then present research evaluating adverse biological effects caused by exposure to various space radiation environments and how these can be reduced. We especially consider the deleterious effects on cellular DNA and how cells activate DNA repair mechanisms. The latest technologies being developed, e.g., a fluorescent ubiquitination-based cell cycle indicator, to measure real-time cell cycle progression and DNA damage caused by exposure to ultraviolet radiation are presented. Progress in examining the combined effects of microgravity and radiation to animals and plants are summarized, and our current understanding of the relationship between psychological stress and radiation is presented. Finally, we provide details about protective agents and the study of organisms that are highly resistant to radiation and how their biological mechanisms may aid developing novel technologies that alleviate biological damage caused by radiation. Future research that furthers our understanding of the effects of space radiation on human health will facilitate risk-mitigating strategies to enable long-term space and planetary exploration.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32337251 PMCID: PMC7168699 DOI: 10.1155/2020/4703286
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Wild-type EGFP (ab) fluorescence occurs as a result of HR between two EGFP genes (a and b) that are both inactive because of deletions (shadowed boxes).
Summary of brain cellular response to HZE irradiation (doses of less than 2 Gy).
| Cells | Response | Irradiation | Dose rate (Gy/min) | Time after IR | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neuron | Cell death | 56Fe: 1.5 Gy | 0.88 | 1 m | [ |
| 56Fe: 1.6 Gy | 1 | 12 m | [ | ||
| Deficits to proliferation and differentiation | 28Si: 0.2, 1 Gy | 1 | 24 h, 3 m | [ | |
| 56Fe: 0.3, 1 Gy | 0.01–1 | 48 h, 1 m | [ | ||
| Changes to dendritic, axonal, and synaptic properties | GCR (H+He+O): 0.5 Gy | 0.0616 | 100+ d | [ | |
| 16O, 48Ti: 0.05, 0.3 Gy | 0.05, 0.25 | 15 w | [ | ||
| 1H: 1 Gy | 0.55 | 3 m | [ | ||
| 16O, 28Si, 4He: 0.3 Gy | 6 w | [ | |||
| 56Fe: 0.5 Gy | 3 m | [ | |||
| 1H: 0.5 Gy + 16O: 0.1 Gy |
1H: 0.18–0.19 | 3 m | [ | ||
|
| |||||
| Glia | Astrocyte activation | 56Fe: 1.6 Gy | 1 | 12 m | [ |
| Microglial activation | GCR (H+He+O): 0.5 Gy | 0.0616 | 100+ d | [ | |
| 16O, 48Ti: 0.05, 0.3 Gy | 0.05, 0.25 | 15 w, | [ | ||
| 4He: 0.05, 0.3 Gy | 0.05 | 12 m | [ | ||
h: hours; d: days; w: weeks; m: months.
Figure 2Cell cycle-phasing capabilities of the Fucci technology. Cell cycle regulations involving E3 ligase activities of CUL4Ddb1, SCFSkp2, and APCCdh1. Molecules whose intracellular concentrations or enzymatic activities change in a cell cycle-dependent manner are shown in color. PCNA: DNA-bound PCNA. Data adapted from Sakaue-Sawano et al. [164].
Biological effects of radiation and μG in space experiments.
| Interactive effects | Species | Biological index | Flight time | Irradiationa | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No | Human blood | Chromosomal aberration | 12 h | + 32P, | [ |
|
| DSB and SSB repair | 14 d | Pre-X-rays | [ | |
|
| DSB repair | 10 d | Pre-X-rays | [ | |
|
| SOS response | 2–4 d | Pre-X-rays | [ | |
| Human blood | Chromosomal aberration | 8 d | Pre- and post- | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Yes, ↑ |
| Larval mortality | 45 h | + 85Sr, | [ |
|
| Abnormality | 7 d | No | [ | |
|
| DSB repair | 9 d | No | [ | |
|
| Mutation | 8 d | No | [ | |
|
| Spore formation | 9 d | No | [ | |
| Human blood | Chromosomal aberration | 10–485 d | Pre- and post-X-rays | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Yes, ↓ |
| Cell killing, mutation | 45 h | + 85Sr, | [ |
|
| Cell killing | 14 d | Pre- | [ | |
E. coli: Escherichia coli; S. cerevisiae: Saccharomyces cerevisiae; D. melanogaster: Drosophila melanogaster; C. morosus: Carausius morosus; D. discoideum: Dictyostelium discoideum; N. crassa: Neurospora crassa; D. radiodurans: Deinococcus radiodurans; DSB: DNA double-strand breaks; SSB: DNA single-strand breaks; h: hours; d: days. a+ means simultaneous irradiation with spaceflight.
Biological effects of radiation and simulated μG in ground experiments.
| Interactive effects | Cells | Biological index | Devices | Irradiationa | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes, ↑ | Lymphoblastoid | Mutation, micronuclei | RWV | Pre-60Co, | [ |
| Lymphocyte | Mutation | RWV | Pre-60Co, | [ | |
| Lymphocyte |
| RWV | Pre-137Cs, | [ | |
| Lymphoblast | Apoptosis, ROS | RWV | Post-C-ion | [ | |
| Fibroblast | Gene induction | RPM | + 252Cf, neutron | [ | |
| Neuron | Apoptosis, gene induction | RPM | + 252Cf, neutron | [ | |
| Fibroblast | Chromosomal aberration | SSS | + X-rays, + C-ion | [ | |
| Fibroblast | Cell cycle-promoting genes | SSS | + C-ion | [ | |
|
| |||||
| Yes, ↓ | Lymphocyte | Apoptosis | RWV | Pre-137Cs, | [ |
| Lymphoblastoid | Apoptosis | RWV | Pre-60Co, | [ | |
| Lymphocyte | Micro-RNA | RWV | Pre-137Cs, | [ | |
| Fibroblast | Cell cycle-suppressing genes | SSS | + C-ion | [ | |
ROS: reactive oxygen species; RWV: rotating wall vessel bioreactor; RPM: random positioning machine; SSS: system of simultaneous irradiation in simulated-microgravity. a+ means simultaneous irradiation with spaceflight.
Figure 3A 3D clinostat quipped with a UV-visible light unit. The UV-visible light unit is composed of white and UV-B- (280 nm) light-emitting diodes (LEDs).
Classification of tissues based on their radiosensitivity.
| Frequency of cell division | Tissue | Radiosensitivity |
|---|---|---|
| ++ | Lymphoid tissue, hematopoietic tissue (bone marrow), testicular epithelium, follicular epithelium, and intestinal epithelium | Extremely high |
| + | Oropharyngeal oral epithelium, skin epidermis, hair follicle epithelium, sebaceous gland epithelium, bladder epithelium, esophageal epithelium, lens epithelium, gastric gland epithelium, and ureteral epithelium | High |
| +/– | Connective tissue, small vessel tissue, and growing cartilage/bone tissue | Intermediate |
| – | Mature cartilage/bone tissue, mucous serous epithelium, sweat gland epithelium, nasopharyngeal epithelium, lung epithelium, renal epithelium, liver epithelium, pancreatic epithelium, pituitary epithelium, thyroid epithelium, and adrenal epithelium | Low |
| – – | Nerve tissue and muscle tissue | Extremely low |
Figure 4Dsup reduced X-ray-induced DNA damage (a) and improved viability of irradiated human cultured cells (b). The number of DNA-break marker, γ-H2AX foci in nonirradiated or 1 Gy-irradiated conditions (a), and growth curves after 4 Gy-irradiation (b) are compared among nonengineered human cultured cells (HEK293, control), Dsup-expressing cells (Dsup), and Dsup-knockdown cells (Dsup+shDsup). Reproduced from Hashimoto and Kunieda [253] under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.