Anken R H, Hilbig R
Zoological Institute, University of Stuttgart-Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany.
Adv Space Res. 2004;34(7):1592-7. doi: 10.1016/j.asr.2004.01.023.
It has been repeatedly shown earlier that some fish of a given batch reveal motion sickness (a kinetosis) at the transition from 1 g to microgravity. In the course of parabolic aircraft flight experiments, it has been demonstrated that kinetosis susceptibility is correlated with asymmetric inner ear otoliths (i.e., differently weighed statoliths on the right and the left side of the head) or with genetically predispositioned malformed cells within the sensory epithelia of the inner ear. Hitherto, the threshold of gravity perception for inducing kinetotic behavior as well as the relative importance of asymmetric otoliths versus malformed epithelia for kinetosis susceptibility has yet not been determined. The following experiment using the ZARM drop-tower facility in Bremen, Germany, is proposed to be carried out in order to answer the aforementioned questions. Larval cichlid fish (Oreochromis mossambicus) will be kept in a camcorder-equipped centrifuge during the microgravity phases of the drops and thus receive various gravity environments ranging from 0.1 to 0.9 g. Videographed controls will be housed outside of the centrifuge receiving 0 g. Based on the video-recordings, animals will be grouped into kinetotically and normally swimming samples. Subsequently, otoliths will be dissected and their size and asymmetry will be measured. Further investigations will focus on the numerical quantification of inner ear supporting and sensory cells as well as on the quantification of inner ear carbonic anhydrase reactivity. A correlation between: (1) the results to be obtained concerning the g-loads inducing kinetosis and (2) the corresponding otolith asymmetry/morphology of sensory epithelia/carbonic anhydrase reactivity will further contribute to the understanding of the origin of kinetosis susceptibility. Besides an outline of the proposed principal experiments, the present study reports on a first series of drop-tower tests, which were undertaken to elucidate the feasibility of the proposal (especially concerning the question, if some 4.7 s of microgravity are sufficient to induce kinetotic behavior in larval fish).
先前已有多项研究表明,特定批次的一些鱼类在从1g重力环境过渡到微重力环境时会出现晕动病(运动病)。在抛物线飞行实验过程中,已证明运动病易感性与内耳耳石不对称有关(即头部左右两侧的平衡石重量不同),或者与内耳感觉上皮内遗传易感性导致的畸形细胞有关。迄今为止,引发运动病行为的重力感知阈值以及耳石不对称与畸形上皮对运动病易感性的相对重要性尚未确定。为了回答上述问题,建议在德国不来梅的ZARM落塔设施中进行以下实验。在落塔的微重力阶段,将莫桑比克罗非鱼幼鱼置于配备摄像机的离心机中,使其接受0.1至0.9g的各种重力环境。视频记录的对照组将置于离心机外,接受0g重力。根据视频记录,将动物分为运动病游泳组和正常游泳组。随后,解剖耳石并测量其大小和不对称性。进一步的研究将集中在内耳支持细胞和感觉细胞的数量量化以及内耳碳酸酐酶反应性的量化上。(1)关于引发运动病的重力负荷所获得的结果与(2)感觉上皮的相应耳石不对称/形态/碳酸酐酶反应性之间的相关性,将进一步有助于理解运动病易感性的起源。除了提出主要实验的概述外,本研究还报告了一系列首次落塔试验,这些试验旨在阐明该提议的可行性(特别是关于4.7秒左右的微重力是否足以在幼鱼中引发运动病行为的问题)。