AI Article Synopsis

  • Spaceflight can lead to health issues, affecting various systems like the immune system, with oxidative stress playing a key role.
  • Research on Nrf2-knockout mice showed they experienced worse immunosuppression and inflammation from spaceflight compared to normal mice.
  • The findings suggest that enhancing Nrf2 activity could help alleviate health challenges faced by astronauts during space travel.

Article Abstract

Spaceflight-related stresses impact health via various body systems, including the haematopoietic and immune systems, with effects ranging from moderate alterations of homoeostasis to serious illness. Oxidative stress appears to be involved in these changes, and the transcription factor Nrf2, which regulates expression of a set of cytoprotective and antioxidative stress response genes, has been implicated in the response to spaceflight-induced stresses. Here, we show through analyses of mice from the MHU-3 project, in which Nrf2-knockout mice travelled in space for 31 days, that mice lacking Nrf2 suffer more seriously from spaceflight-induced immunosuppression than wild-type mice. We discovered that a one-month spaceflight-triggered the expression of tissue inflammatory marker genes in wild-type mice, an effect that was even more pronounced in the absence of Nrf2. Concomitant with induction of inflammatory conditions, the consumption of coagulation-fibrinolytic factors and platelets was elevated by spaceflight and further accelerated by Nrf2 deficiency. These results highlight that Nrf2 mitigates spaceflight-induced inflammation, subsequent immunosuppression, and thrombotic microangiopathy. These observations reveal a new strategy to relieve health problems encountered during spaceflight.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10457343PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05251-wDOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Spaceflight can lead to health issues, affecting various systems like the immune system, with oxidative stress playing a key role.
  • Research on Nrf2-knockout mice showed they experienced worse immunosuppression and inflammation from spaceflight compared to normal mice.
  • The findings suggest that enhancing Nrf2 activity could help alleviate health challenges faced by astronauts during space travel.
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Space exploration exposes astronauts to a variety of gravitational stresses. Exposure to a reduced gravity environment affects human anatomy and physiology. Countermeasures to restore homeostatic states within the human body have begun.

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Spaceflight presents a spectrum of stresses very different from those associated with terrestrial conditions. Our previous study (BMC Genom. : 659, 2014) integrated the expressions of mRNAs, microRNAs, and proteins and results indicated that microgravity induces an immunosuppressive state that can facilitate opportunistic pathogenic attack.

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Contribution of the urodele amphibian Pleurodeles waltl to the analysis of spaceflight-associated immune system deregulation.

Mol Immunol

December 2013

Lorraine University, Faculty of Medicine, Stress Immunity Pathogens Laboratory, EA7300, 9 Avenue de la Forêt de Haye, F-54500 Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, France. Electronic address:

Immune system deregulation has been demonstrated to occur during and immediately following spaceflight. Several animal models have been used to study this phenomenon because of the limited availability of human subjects in space as well as of the need to carry out experiments requiring samples and experimental conditions that cannot be performed using humans. Here, we review major spaceflight-induced microbial and immunological modifications, some of the existing hardware developed to host amphibians in a space station and immunological information provided by space experiments performed with Pleurodeles waltl as an animal model.

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