Willis Craig R G, Szewczyk Nathaniel J, Costes Sylvain V, Udranszky Ingrid A, Reinsch Sigrid S, Etheridge Timothy, Conley Catharine A
Department of Sport and Health Sciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, EX1 2LU, UK.
MRC-ARUK Centre for Musculoskeletal Ageing Research and National Institute of Health Research, Biomedical Research Centre, School of Medicine, Royal Derby Hospital, University of Nottingham, Derby, DE22 3DT, UK.
iScience. 2020 Nov 25;23(12):101734. doi: 10.1016/j.isci.2020.101734. eCollection 2020 Dec 18.
Deep space exploration is firmly within reach, but health decline during extended spaceflight remains a key challenge. In this study, we performed comparative transcriptomic analysis of responses to varying degrees of hypergravity and to two spaceflight experiments (ICE-FIRST and CERISE). We found that progressive hypergravitational load concomitantly increases the extent of differential gene regulation and that subtle changes in ∼1,000 genes are reproducibly observed during spaceflight-induced microgravity. Consequently, we deduce those genes that are concordantly regulated by altered gravity or that display inverted expression profiles during hypergravity versus microgravity. Through doing so, we identify several candidate targets with terrestrial roles in neuronal function and/or cellular metabolism, which are linked to regulation by /FOXO signaling. These data offer a strong foundation from which to expedite mechanistic understanding of spaceflight-induced maladaptation in higher organisms and, ultimately, promote future targeted therapeutic development.
深空探索已近在咫尺,但长期太空飞行期间的健康衰退仍是一项关键挑战。在本研究中,我们对不同程度的超重力反应以及两项太空飞行实验(ICE-FIRST和CERISE)进行了比较转录组分析。我们发现,渐进式超重力负荷会相应增加差异基因调控的程度,并且在太空飞行诱导的微重力期间可重复观察到约1000个基因的细微变化。因此,我们推断出那些受重力改变一致调控的基因,或者在超重力与微重力期间表现出相反表达谱的基因。通过这样做,我们确定了几个在神经元功能和/或细胞代谢中具有地面作用的候选靶点,这些靶点与FOXO信号通路的调控有关。这些数据为加快对高等生物太空飞行诱导的适应不良的机制理解提供了坚实基础,并最终促进未来靶向治疗的发展。