| Literature DB >> 32964111 |
Nídia de Sousa1, Marcello Caporicci2, Jeroen Vandersteen3, Jose Ignacio Rojo-Laguna1, Emili Saló1, Teresa Adell1, Gennaro Auletta4,5, Jack J W A van Loon2,6.
Abstract
Although many examples of simulated and real microgravity demonstrating their profound effect on biological systems are described in literature, few reports deal with hypergravity and vibration effects, the levels of which are severely increased during the launch preceding the desired microgravity period. Here, we used planarians, flatworms that can regenerate any body part in a few days. Planarians are an ideal model to study the impact of launch-related hypergravity and vibration during a regenerative process in a "whole animal" context. Therefore, planarians were subjected to 8.5 minutes of 4 g hypergravity (i.e. a human-rated launch level) in the Large Diameter Centrifuge (LDC) and/or to vibrations (20-2000 Hz, 11.3 G rms) simulating the conditions of a standard rocket launch. The transcriptional levels of genes (erg-1, runt-1, fos, jnk, and yki) related with the early stress response were quantified through qPCR. The results show that early response genes are severely deregulated after static and dynamic loads but more so after a combined exposure of dynamic (vibration) and static (hypergravity) loads, more closely simulating real launch exposure profiles. Importantly, at least four days after the exposure, the transcriptional levels of those genes are still deregulated. Our results highlight the deep impact that short exposures to hypergravity and vibration have in organisms, and thus the implications that space flight launch could have. These phenomena should be taken into account when planning for well-controlled microgravity studies.Entities:
Keywords: Biophysics; Developmental biology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32964111 PMCID: PMC7478964 DOI: 10.1038/s41526-020-00115-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Microgravity ISSN: 2373-8065 Impact factor: 4.415