Incorporation of omics analyses into artificial gravity research for space exploration countermeasure development

被引:0
|
作者
Michael A. Schmidt
Thomas J. Goodwin
Ralph Pelligra
机构
[1] Colorado State University,Sovaris Aerospace, LLC, Advanced Pattern Analysis & Countermeasures Group, Research Innovation Center
[2] NASA Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center,Disease Modeling and Tissue Analogues Laboratory, Biomedical Research and Environmental Sciences Division
[3] NASA Ames Research Center,Chief Medical Officer
来源
Metabolomics | 2016年 / 12卷
关键词
Omics; Gravity; Artificial gravity; Space flight; Astronaut; Countermeasures;
D O I
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学科分类号
摘要
The next major steps in human spaceflight include flyby, orbital, and landing missions to the Moon, Mars, and near earth asteroids. The first crewed deep space mission is expected to launch in 2022, which affords less than 7 years to address the complex question of whether and how to apply artificial gravity to counter the effects of prolonged weightlessness. Various phenotypic changes are demonstrated during artificial gravity experiments. However, the molecular dynamics (genotype and molecular phenotypes) that underlie these morphological, physiological, and behavioral phenotypes are far more complex than previously understood. Thus, targeted molecular assessment of subjects under various G conditions can be expected to miss important patterns of molecular variance that inform the more general phenotypes typically being measured. Use of omics methods can help detect changes across broad molecular networks, as various G-loading paradigms are applied. This will be useful in detecting off-target, or unanticipated effects of the different gravity paradigms applied to humans or animals. Insights gained from these approaches may eventually be used to inform countermeasure development or refine the deployment of existing countermeasures. This convergence of the omics and artificial gravity research communities may be critical if we are to develop the proper artificial gravity solutions under the severely compressed timelines currently established. Thus, the omics community may offer a unique ability to accelerate discovery, provide new insights, and benefit deep space missions in ways that have not been previously considered.
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