Latchney Sarah E, Rivera Phillip D, Mao Xiao W, Ferguson Virginia L, Bateman Ted A, Stodieck Louis S, Nelson Gregory A, Eisch Amelia J
Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas;
Department of Basic Sciences, Division of Radiation Research, Loma Linda University and Medical Center, Loma Linda, California;
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2014 Jun 15;116(12):1593-604. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.01174.2013. Epub 2014 Apr 17.
Space missions necessitate physiological and psychological adaptations to environmental factors not present on Earth, some of which present significant risks for the central nervous system (CNS) of crewmembers. One CNS region of interest is the adult olfactory bulb (OB), as OB structure and function are sensitive to environmental- and experience-induced regulation. It is currently unknown how the OB is altered by spaceflight. In this study, we evaluated OB volume and neurogenesis in mice shortly after a 13-day flight on Space Shuttle Atlantis [Space Transport System (STS)-135] relative to two groups of control mice maintained on Earth. Mice housed on Earth in animal enclosure modules that mimicked the conditions onboard STS-135 (AEM-Ground mice) had greater OB volume relative to mice maintained in standard housing on Earth (Vivarium mice), particularly in the granule (GCL) and glomerular (GL) cell layers. AEM-Ground mice also had more OB neuroblasts and fewer apoptotic cells relative to Vivarium mice. However, the AEM-induced increase in OB volume and neurogenesis was not seen in STS-135 mice (AEM-Flight mice), suggesting that spaceflight may have negated the positive effects of the AEM. In fact, when OB volume of AEM-Flight mice was considered, there was a greater density of apoptotic cells relative to AEM-Ground mice. Our findings suggest that factors present during spaceflight have opposing effects on OB size and neurogenesis, and provide insight into potential strategies to preserve OB structure and function during future space missions.
太空任务需要对地球上不存在的环境因素进行生理和心理适应,其中一些因素对机组人员的中枢神经系统(CNS)构成重大风险。一个值得关注的中枢神经系统区域是成年嗅球(OB),因为嗅球的结构和功能对环境和经验诱导的调节很敏感。目前尚不清楚太空飞行如何改变嗅球。在这项研究中,我们评估了在亚特兰蒂斯号航天飞机[太空运输系统(STS)-135]上进行13天飞行后不久,小鼠的嗅球体积和神经发生情况,并与两组在地球上饲养的对照小鼠进行了比较。与在地球上标准饲养环境中的小鼠(饲养室小鼠)相比,饲养在模拟STS-135上条件的动物饲养舱中的地球小鼠(AEM-地面小鼠)的嗅球体积更大,尤其是在颗粒(GCL)和肾小球(GL)细胞层。与饲养室小鼠相比,AEM-地面小鼠的嗅球神经母细胞也更多,凋亡细胞更少。然而,在STS-135小鼠(AEM-飞行小鼠)中未观察到AEM诱导的嗅球体积和神经发生增加,这表明太空飞行可能抵消了AEM的积极作用。事实上,当考虑AEM-飞行小鼠的嗅球体积时,相对于AEM-地面小鼠,凋亡细胞的密度更高。我们的研究结果表明,太空飞行期间存在的因素对嗅球大小和神经发生有相反的影响,并为未来太空任务中保护嗅球结构和功能的潜在策略提供了见解。