Adamopoulos Konstantinos I, Sanders Lauren M, Costes Sylvain V
National Technical University of Athens, School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Biomedical Engineering Laboratory, Zografou, Athens, Greece.
Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Space Biosciences Division, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA.
NPJ Microgravity. 2024 Apr 26;10(1):49. doi: 10.1038/s41526-024-00392-6.
One of the greatest challenges of humanity for deep space exploration is to fully understand how altered gravitational conditions affect human physiology. It is evident that the spaceflight environment causes multiple alterations to musculoskeletal, cardiovascular, immune and central nervous systems, to name a few known effects. To better characterize these biological effects, we compare gene expression datasets from microarray studies found in NASA GeneLab, part of the NASA Open Science Data Repository. In this review, we summarize these archived results for various tissues, emphasizing key genes which are highly reproducible in different mice or human experiments. Such exhaustive mining shows the potential of NASA Open Science data to identify and validate mechanisms taking place when mammalian organisms are exposed to microgravity or other spaceflight conditions. Our comparative meta-analysis findings highlight certain degrees of overlap and reproducibility in genes identified as differentially expressed within musculoskeletal tissues in each species across a variety of altered gravity conditions. However, the level of overlap between species was found to be significantly limited, partly attributed to the limited availability of human samples.
人类进行深空探索面临的最大挑战之一是全面了解重力条件的改变如何影响人体生理机能。显然,太空飞行环境会对肌肉骨骼、心血管、免疫和中枢神经系统等造成多种改变,这只是已知的部分影响。为了更好地描述这些生物学效应,我们比较了美国国家航空航天局(NASA)基因实验室(NASA开放科学数据存储库的一部分)微阵列研究中的基因表达数据集。在本综述中,我们总结了这些针对各种组织的存档结果,重点强调了在不同小鼠或人体实验中具有高度可重复性的关键基因。这种详尽的挖掘展示了NASA开放科学数据在识别和验证哺乳动物机体暴露于微重力或其他太空飞行条件时所发生机制方面的潜力。我们的比较荟萃分析结果突出了在各种重力条件改变下,每个物种肌肉骨骼组织中被鉴定为差异表达的基因存在一定程度的重叠和可重复性。然而,发现物种之间的重叠程度明显有限,部分原因是人类样本的可用性有限。