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Is skeletal muscle ready for long-term spaceflight and return to gravity?It is now clear that prevention of muscle debilitation during spaceflight will require a broader approach than simple exercise aimed at strengthening of the muscle fibers. The levels of several hormones and receptors are altered by unloading and must be returned to homeostasis. Pharmacotherapy and gene transfer strategies to raise the relative level of structural proteins may minimize the problems faced by astronauts in readapting to Earth-gravity. Up to now, we have only minimally exploited microgravity for advancing our understanding of muscle biology. A research laboratory in the space station with a centrifuge facility (gravity control) is essential for conducting basic research in this field. Microgravity has proven an excellent tool for noninvasively perturbing the synthesis of muscle proteins in the search for molecular signals and gene regulatory factors influencing differentiation, growth, maintenance and atrophy of muscle. Understanding the relation between blood flow and interstitial edema and between workload and subsequent structural failure are but two important problems that require serious attention. The roles of hormones and growth factors in regulating gene expression and their microgravity-induced altered production are other urgent issues to pursue. These types of studies will yield information that advances basic knowledge of muscle biology and offers insights into countermeasure design. This knowledge is likely to assist rehabilitation of diseased or injured muscles in humans on Earth, especially individuals in the more vulnerable aging population and persons participating in strenuous sports. Will the skeletal muscle system be prepared for the increased exposure to microgravity and the return to gravity loading without injury when space station is operational? The answer depends in large part on continued access to space and funding of ground-based models and flight experiments. The previous two decades of spaceflight research have described the effects of microgravity on multiple systems. The next generation of experiments promises to be even more exciting as we are challenged to define the cellular and molecular mechanisms of microgravity-induced changes.
Document ID
20040141683
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Riley, D. A.
(Medical College of Wisconsin Milwaukee, United States)
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1999
Publication Information
Publication: Advances in space biology and medicine
Volume: 7
ISSN: 1569-2574
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 5UO1-NS33472
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
manned
Review, Tutorial
STS Shuttle Project
NASA Discipline Musculoskeletal
Review
Flight Experiment
short duration
Non-NASA Center
NASA Program Fundamental Space Biology

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