Menu 
  • Home
  • Research on Station
        • Benefits of Research on the ISS
        • Industrial R&D
        • Current Project Pipeline
        • Researcher Interviews
      • Current RFI

        hardware

        RFI-Organs-On-Chips Research

      • Researcher Interviews

        No items found
  • Getting to Space
        • Getting to Space
        • Implementation Partners
        • ISS Hardware
        • Proposal Submission Process
        • Launch Vehicles
        • Support Services
      • Recent Posts

        No items found
      • Projects in Flight

        • Materials Testing – Earth Abundant Textured Thin Film Photovoltaics
        • GLASS AIS TransponderGlobal AIS on Space Station (GLASS)
        • MultiLab: Research Server for the ISS
        • Story Time from Space – 2
        • NIH-Osteo
        View Current ISS Project Pipeline »
  • Research Library
        • ISS National Lab Research Database
        • ISS National Lab Reports
        • Web Resources
        • Research Apps
      • Recently Added Research

        • Genotype, B-vitamin status, and androgens affect spaceflight-induced ophthalmic changes
        • SUBSONIC MOTION OF A PROJECTILE IN A FLUID COMPLEX PLASMA UNDER MICROGRAVITY CONDITIONS
        • Coactivator-Dependent Oscillation of Chromatin Accessibility Dictates Circadian Gene Amplitude via REV-ERB Loading
      • Popular Tags

        • Cell Differentiation
        • Earth Observation
        • Fluid physics
        • Gene Expression
        • Human Research
        • Material science
        • Mice
        • Microbiology
        • Simulated microgravity
        • Technology demonstration
  • Make Contact
  • Home
  • Research on Station
    • Benefits of Microgravity
    • Industrial R&D
    • Current Project Pipeline
    • Research Opportunities
    • Researcher Interviews
  • Facilities & Hardware
    • ISS Hardware
    • Implementation Partners
  • Getting to Space
    • Getting to Space
    • Proposal Submission Process
    • Launch Vehicles
  • Research Library
    • Research Apps
    • Researcher Guides
    • Resources
    • Publication Database

« Go Back

Research Containing: Femur Head/metabolism/*pathology/physiopathology

Mechanical unloading of bone in microgravity reduces mesenchymal and hematopoietic stem cell-mediated tissue regeneration

by cfynanon 22 August 2016in Biology & Biotechnology No comment

Mechanical loading of mammalian tissues is a potent promoter of tissue growth and regeneration, whilst unloading in microgravity can cause reduced tissue regeneration, possibly through effects on stem cell tissue progenitors. To test the specific hypothesis that mechanical unloading alters differentiation of bone marrow mesenchymal and hematopoietic stem cell lineages, we studied cellular and molecular aspects of how bone marrow in the mouse proximal femur responds to unloading in microgravity. Trabecular and cortical endosteal bone surfaces in the femoral head underwent significant bone resorption in microgravity, enlarging the marrow cavity. Cells isolated from the femoral head marrow compartment showed significant down-regulation of gene expression markers for early mesenchymal and hematopoietic differentiation, including FUT1(-6.72), CSF2(-3.30), CD90(-3.33), PTPRC(-2.79), and GDF15(-2.45), but not stem cell markers, such as SOX2. At the cellular level, in situ histological analysis revealed decreased megakaryocyte numbers whilst erythrocytes were increased 2.33 fold. Furthermore, erythrocytes displayed elevated fucosylation and clustering adjacent to sinuses forming the marrow-blood barrier, possibly providing a mechanistic basis for explaining spaceflight anemia. Culture of isolated bone marrow cells immediately after microgravity exposure increased the marrow progenitor’s potential for mesenchymal differentiation into in-vitro mineralized bone nodules, and hematopoietic differentiation into osteoclasts, suggesting an accumulation of undifferentiated progenitors during exposure to microgravity. These results support the idea that mechanical unloading of mammalian tissues in microgravity is a strong inhibitor of tissue growth and regeneration mechanisms, acting at the level of early mesenchymal and hematopoietic stem cell differentiation.

Related URLs:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25011075

Researcher Interviews

No items found

Projects in Flight

  • Materials Testing – Earth Abundant Textured Thin Film Photovoltaics
  • GLASS AIS TransponderGlobal AIS on Space Station (GLASS)
  • MultiLab: Research Server for the ISS
  • Story Time from Space – 2
  • NIH-Osteo
View Current ISS Project Pipeline »

CASIS on Twitter

Tweets by ISS_CASIS