Longitudinal multi-omics analysis of host microbiome architecture and immune responses during short-term spaceflight
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Published:2024-06-11
Issue:7
Volume:9
Page:1661-1675
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ISSN:2058-5276
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Container-title:Nature Microbiology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nat Microbiol
Author:
Tierney Braden T., Kim JangKeunORCID, Overbey Eliah G.ORCID, Ryon Krista A., Foox Jonathan, Sierra Maria A., Bhattacharya Chandrima, Damle Namita, Najjar DeenaORCID, Park JiwoonORCID, Garcia Medina J. Sebastian, Houerbi Nadia, Meydan CemORCID, Wain Hirschberg Jeremy, Qiu Jake, Kleinman Ashley S., Al-Ghalith Gabriel A., MacKay Matthew, Afshin Evan E., Dhir Raja, Borg JosephORCID, Gatt ChristineORCID, Brereton NicholasORCID, Readhead Benjamin P., Beyaz Semir, Venkateswaran Kasthuri J., Wiseman Kelly, Moreno Juan, Boddicker Andrew M., Zhao Junhua, Lajoie Bryan R., Scott Ryan T.ORCID, Altomare Andrew, Kruglyak Semyon, Levy Shawn, Church George M., Mason Christopher E.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractMaintenance of astronaut health during spaceflight will require monitoring and potentially modulating their microbiomes. However, documenting microbial shifts during spaceflight has been difficult due to mission constraints that lead to limited sampling and profiling. Here we executed a six-month longitudinal study to quantify the high-resolution human microbiome response to three days in orbit for four individuals. Using paired metagenomics and metatranscriptomics alongside single-nuclei immune cell profiling, we characterized time-dependent, multikingdom microbiome changes across 750 samples and 10 body sites before, during and after spaceflight at eight timepoints. We found that most alterations were transient across body sites; for example, viruses increased in skin sites mostly during flight. However, longer-term shifts were observed in the oral microbiome, including increased plaque-associated bacteria (for example, Fusobacteriota), which correlated with immune cell gene expression. Further, microbial genes associated with phage activity, toxin–antitoxin systems and stress response were enriched across multiple body sites. In total, this study reveals in-depth characterization of microbiome and immune response shifts experienced by astronauts during short-term spaceflight and the associated changes to the living environment, which can help guide future missions, spacecraft design and space habitat planning.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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