Publications by authors named "J M Davet"

Pleurodeles waltl (amphibian, Urodele) is an appropriate biological model for space experiments on a vertebrate. One reason for interest in this animal concerns the study of the effects of absence of gravity on embryonic development. First, after mating (on Earth) the females retain live, functional sperm in their cloacum for up to 5 months, allowing normal in vivo fertilisation after hormonal stimulation.

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The study of the influence of weightlessness on fertilization and embryonic development of a vertebrate is of importance in the understanding of basic embryogenesis and in the preparation of the future exploration of space. Accordingly, specific hardware was designed to perform experiments on board the MIR space station with an amphibian vertebrate model, taking into account the biological requirements and the multiple constraints of a long-term mission. This paper describes the biological uses and presents the technological specifications of the device developed under CNES management.

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NIH-R1 and R2 missions, conducted by NASA, allowed us to study the effects of the microgravitational environment 1) on cardiac ANP in pregnant rats, spaceflown for 11 days and dissected after a 2-day readaptation to Earth's gravity, after natural delivery, and 2) on maturation of cardiac ANP system in rat fetuses developed for 11 days in space and dissected on the day of landing, 2 days before birth. Immunocytochemical and electron microscopy analyses showed a typical formation of ANP-containing granules in atrial myocytes, in both dams and fetuses. Using competitive RT-PCR and radioimmunoassays, we observed that, after 2 days of readaptation to Earth's gravity, cardiac ANP biosynthesis of rat dams flown in space was increased by about twice, when compared to Synchronous and Vivarium Control rats.

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To determine when choroidal structures were restored after readaptation to Earth gravity or orthostatic position, fine structure and protein distribution were studied in rat choroid plexus dissected either 6 h [Space Life Sciences-2 (SLS-2) experiments] or 2 days [National Institutes of Health-Rodent 1 (NIH-R1) experiments] after a spaceflight, or 6 h after head-down tilt (HDT) experiments. Apical alterations were noted in choroidal cells from SLS-2 and HDT animals, confirming that weightlessness impaired choroidal structures and functions. However, the presence of small apical microvilli and kinocilia and the absence of vesicle accumulations showed that the apical organization began to be restored rapidly after landing.

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Cellular distributions of ezrin, a cytoskeletal protein involved in apical cell differentiation in choroid plexus, and carbonic anhydrase II, which is partly involved in the cerebrospinal fluid production, were studied by immunocytochemistry, at the level of choroidal epithelial cells from the lateral, third and fourth ventricles in normal or experimental fetuses, in parallel with the ultrastructure of apical microvilli, observed by transmission electron microscopy. We compared choroid plexuses from developing normal rats (gestational day 15 to birth) with choroid plexuses from 20-day-old rat fetuses, developed for 11 days in space, aboard a space shuttle (NASA STS-66 mission, NIH-R1 experiments), from gestational day 9 to day 20. The main changes observed in fetuses developed in space were demonstrated by immunocytochemistry and concerned the distribution of ezrin and carbonic anhydrase II.

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