Abstract
AbstractSpace anemia affects astronauts and the underlying molecular alterations remain unknown. We evaluated the response of erythropoiesis-modulating genes to spaceflight through the analysis of leukocyte transcriptomes from astronauts during long-duration spaceflight and from an Earth model of microgravity. Differential expression analysis identified 50 genes encoding ribosomal proteins with reduced expression at the transition to bed rest and increased during the bed rest phase; a similar trend was observed in astronauts. Additional genes associated with anemia (15 genes), erythrocyte maturation (3 genes), and hemoglobin (6 genes) were down-regulated during bed rest and increased during reambulation. Transcript levels of the erythropoiesis transcription factor GATA1 and nine of most enriched erythrocyte proteins increased at reambulation after bed rest and at return to Earth from space. Dynamic changes of the leukocyte transcriptome composition while in microgravity and during reambulation supported an erythropoietic modulation accompanying the hemolysis of space anemia and of immobility-induced anemia.
Funder
Gouvernement du Canada | Canadian Space Agency
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference50 articles.
1. Udden, M. M., Driscoll, T. B., Pickett, M. H., Leach-Huntoon, C. S. & Alfrey, C. P. Decreased production of red blood cells in human subjects exposed to microgravity. J. Lab. Clin. Med. 125, 442–429 (1995).
2. Trudel, G., Shafer, J., Laneuville, O. & Ramsay, T. Characterizing the effect of exposure to microgravity on anemia: more space is worse. Am. J. Hematol. 95, 267–273 (2020).
3. Culliton, K., Louati, H., Laneuville, O., Ramsay, T. & Trudel, G. Six degrees head-down tilt bed rest caused low-grade hemolysis: a prospective randomized clinical trial. NPJ Microgravity 7, 4 (2021).
4. Trudel, G., Uhthoff, H. K. & Laneuville, O. Hemolysis during and after 21 days of head-down-tilt bed rest. Physiol. Rep. 5, e13469 (2017).
5. Trudel, G., Shahin, N., Ramsay, T., Laneuville, O. & Louati, H. Hemolysis contributes to anemia during long-duration space flight. Nat. Med. 28, 59–62 (2022).