Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, United States.
Laboratory Animal Resource Center, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, United States.
Life Sci Space Res (Amst). 2018 May;17:44-50. doi: 10.1016/j.lssr.2018.03.002. Epub 2018 Mar 7.
This study was initiated as a component of a larger undertaking designed to study bone healing in microgravity aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Spaceflight experimentation introduces multiple challenges not seen in ground studies, especially with regard to physical space, limited resources, and inability to easily reproduce results. Together, these can lead to diminished statistical power and increased risk of failure. It is because of the limited space, and need for improved statistical power by increasing sample size over historical numbers, NASA studies involving mice require housing mice at densities higher than recommended in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (National Research Council, 2011). All previous NASA missions in which mice were co-housed, involved female mice; however, in our spaceflight studies examining bone healing, male mice are required for optimal experimentation. Additionally, the logistics associated with spaceflight hardware and our study design necessitated variation of density and cohort make up during the experiment. This required the development of a new method to successfully co-house male mice while varying mouse density and hierarchical structure. For this experiment, male mice in an experimental housing schematic of variable density (Spaceflight Correlate) analogous to previously established NASA spaceflight studies was compared to a standard ground based housing schematic (Normal Density Controls) throughout the experimental timeline. We hypothesized that mice in the Spaceflight Correlate group would show no significant difference in activity, aggression, or stress when compared to Normal Density Controls. Activity and aggression were assessed using a novel activity scoring system (based on prior literature, validated in-house) and stress was assessed via body weights, organ weights, and veterinary assessment. No significant differences were detected between the Spaceflight Correlate group and the Normal Density Controls in activity, aggression, body weight, or organ weight, which was confirmed by veterinary assessments. Completion of this study allowed for clearance by NASA of our bone healing experiments aboard the ISS, and our experiment was successfully launched February 19, 2017 on SpaceX CRS-10.
本研究是作为旨在研究国际空间站 (ISS) 微重力条件下骨愈合的更大研究计划的一部分而启动的。航天飞行实验带来了许多在地面研究中没有遇到的挑战,特别是在物理空间、有限的资源和难以轻松复制结果方面。所有这些因素加在一起,会导致统计效力降低,失败风险增加。由于空间有限,并且需要通过增加样本量来提高统计效力,超过历史数量,因此涉及小鼠的 NASA 研究需要将小鼠的密度提高到《实验室动物护理和使用指南》(国家研究委员会,2011 年)建议的水平以上。以前所有涉及共同饲养小鼠的 NASA 任务都涉及雌性小鼠;然而,在我们研究骨愈合的太空飞行研究中,需要雄性小鼠进行最佳实验。此外,与太空飞行硬件相关的后勤工作和我们的研究设计需要在实验过程中改变密度和队列组成。这需要开发一种新方法,以便在改变小鼠密度和层次结构的同时成功地共同饲养雄性小鼠。对于这项实验,在类似于先前建立的 NASA 太空飞行研究的可变密度(太空飞行相关)实验性饲养方案中,雄性小鼠与标准地面饲养方案(正常密度对照)在整个实验时间内进行了比较。我们假设与正常密度对照相比,太空飞行相关组的小鼠在活动、攻击性或应激方面没有显著差异。使用一种新颖的活动评分系统(基于先前的文献,内部验证)评估活动和攻击性,通过体重、器官重量和兽医评估评估应激。在活动、攻击性、体重或器官重量方面,太空飞行相关组与正常密度对照组之间未检测到显著差异,兽医评估也证实了这一点。这项研究的完成使 NASA 批准了我们在国际空间站进行的骨愈合实验,我们的实验于 2017 年 2 月 19 日成功由 SpaceX CRS-10 发射。