Modeling the Effects of Protracted Cosmic Radiation in a Human Organ‐on‐Chip Platform

Author:

Tavakol Daniel Naveed1ORCID,Nash Trevor R.1,Kim Youngbin1,Graney Pamela L.1,Liberman Martin1,Fleischer Sharon1,Lock Roberta I.1,O'Donnell Aaron1,Andrews Leah1,Ning Derek1,Yeager Keith1,Harken Andrew2,Deoli Naresh2,Amundson Sally A.2,Garty Guy2,Leong Kam W.1,Brenner David J.2,Vunjak‐Novakovic Gordana3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering Columbia University New York NY 10032 USA

2. Center for Radiological Research Columbia University New York NY 10032 USA

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering Department of Medicine, and College of Dental Medicine Columbia University New York NY 10032 USA

Abstract

AbstractGalactic cosmic radiation (GCR) is one of the most serious risks posed to astronauts during missions to the Moon and Mars. Experimental models capable of recapitulating human physiology are critical to understanding the effects of radiation on human organs and developing radioprotective measures against space travel exposures. The effects of systemic radiation are studied using a multi‐organ‐on‐a‐chip (multi‐OoC) platform containing engineered tissue models of human bone marrow (site of hematopoiesis and acute radiation damage), cardiac muscle (site of chronic radiation damage) and liver (site of metabolism), linked by vascular circulation with an endothelial barrier separating individual tissue chambers from the vascular perfusate. Following protracted neutron radiation, the most damaging radiation component in deep space, a greater deviation of tissue function is observed as compared to the same cumulative dose delivered acutely. Further, by characterizing engineered bone marrow (eBM)‐derived immune cells in circulation, 58 unique genes specific to the effects of protracted neutron dosing are identified, as compared to acutely irradiated and healthy tissues. It propose that this bioengineered platform allows studies of human responses to extended radiation exposure in an “astronaut‐on‐a‐chip” model that can inform measures for mitigating cosmic radiation injury.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

National Aeronautics and Space Administration

National Cancer Institute

National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program

Publisher

Wiley

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