4.7 Article

Recovery from 6-month spaceflight at the International Space Station: muscle-related stress into a proinflammatory setting

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 5168-5180

Publisher

FEDERATION AMER SOC EXP BIOL
DOI: 10.1096/fj.201801625R

Keywords

microRNA-206; inflamma-miRs; proteasome; SERPINA1

Funding

  1. European Space Agency (ESA)
  2. DLR [2475 030]
  3. Ricerca Fondamentale Orientata (RFO)
  4. Project Digital Personalised Medicine-Healthy Ageing: Network Analysis of Big Multiomics Data to Search from New Diagnostic, Prognostic, and Therapeutic Targets (DPM-AGEING) [14.Y26.31.0026]
  5. Italian Ministry of Education, University, and Research (MIUR) [PRIN 2015FBNB5Y]

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The Sarcolab pilot study of 2 crewmembers, investigated before and after a 6-mo International Space Station mission, has demonstrated the substantial muscle wasting and weakness, along with disruption of muscle's oxidative metabolism. The present work aimed at evaluating the pro/anti-inflammatory status in the same 2 crewmembers (A, B). Blood circulating (c-)microRNAs (miRs), c-proteasome, c-mitochondrial DNA, and cytokines were assessed by real-time quantitative PCR or ELISA tests. Time series analysis was performed (i.e., before flight and after landing) at 1 and 15 d of recovery (R+1 and R+15, respectively). C-biomarkers were compared with an age-matched control population and with 2-dimensional proteomic analysis of the 2 crewmembers' muscle biopsies. Striking differences were observed between the 2 crewmembers at R+1, in terms of inflamma-miRs (c-miRs-21-5p, -126-3p, and -146a-5p), muscle specific (myo)-miR-206, c-proteasome, and IL-6/leptin, thus making the 2 astronauts dissimilar to each other. Final recovery levels of c-proteasome, c-inflamma-miRs, and c-myo-miR-206 were not reverted to the baseline values in crewmember A. In both crewmembers, myo-miR-206 changed significantly after recovery. Muscle biopsy of astronaut A showed an impressive 80% increase of alpha-1-antitrypsin, a target of miR-126-3p. These results point to a strong stress response induced by spaceflight involving muscle tissue and the proinflammatory setting, where inflamma-miRs and myo-miR-206 mediate the systemic recovery phase after landing.

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