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Late Effects of Heavy-Ion Irradiation on Ex Vivo Osteoblastogenesis and Cancellous Bone MicroarchitectureProlonged spaceflight causes degeneration of skeletal tissue with incomplete recovery even after return to Earth. We hypothesize that heavy-ion irradiation, a component of Galactic Cosmic Radiation, damages osteoblast progenitors and may contribute to bone loss during long duration space travel beyond the protection of the Earth's magnetosphere. Male, 16 week-old C57BL6/J mice were exposed to high-LET (56-Fe, 600MeV) radiation using either low (5 or 10cGy) or high (50 or 200cGy) doses at the NASA Space Radiation Lab and were euthanized 3-4, 7, or 35 days later. Bone structure was quantified by microcomputed tomography (6.8 μm pixel size) and marrow cell redox assessed using membrane permeable, free radical-sensitive fluorogenic dyes. To assess osteoblastogenesis, adherent marrow cells were cultured ex vivo, then mineralized nodule formation quantified by imaging and gene expression analyzed by RT-PCR. Interestingly, 3-4 days post-exposure, fluorogenic dyes that reflect cytoplasmic generation of reactive nitrogen/oxygen species (DAF-FM Diacetate or CM-H2DCFDA) revealed irradiation (50cGy) reduced free radical generation (20-45%) compared to sham-irradiated controls. Alternatively, use of a dye showing relative specificity for mitochondrial superoxide generation (MitoSOX) revealed an 88% increase compared to controls. One week after exposure, reactive oxygen/nitrogen levels remained lower (24%) relative to sham-irradiated controls. After one month, high dose irradiation (200 cGy) caused an 86% decrement in ex vivo nodule formation and a 16-31% decrement in bone volume to total volume and trabecular number (50, 200cGy) compared to controls. High dose irradiation (200cGy) up-regulated expression of a late osteoblast marker (BGLAP) and select genes related to oxidative metabolism (Catalase) and DNA damage repair (Gadd45). In contrast, lower doses (5, 10cGy) did not affect bone structure or ex vivo nodule formation, but did down-regulate iNOS by 0.54-0.58 fold. Thus, both low- and high-doses of heavy-ion irradiation cause time-dependent, adaptive changes in redox state within marrow cells but only high doses (50, 200cGy) inhibit osteoblastogenesis and cause cancellous bone loss. We conclude space radiation has the potential to cause persistent damage to bone marrow-derived stem and progenitor cells for osteoblasts despite adaptive changes in cellular redox state.
Document ID
20180007264
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Alwood, J. S.
(Oak Ridge Associated Universities Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Tran, L. H.
(Universities Space Research Association (USRA) Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Kumar, A.
(Universities Space Research Association (USRA) Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Limoli, C. L.
(Universities Space Research Association (USRA) Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Globus, R. K.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
October 30, 2018
Publication Date
February 14, 2018
Subject Category
Life Sciences (General)
Report/Patent Number
ARC-E-DAA-TN12035
Meeting Information
Meeting: NASA Human Research Program Investigators'' Workshop (HRP 2014)
Location: Glaveston, TX
Country: United States
Start Date: February 12, 2014
End Date: February 13, 2014
Sponsors: NASA Headquarters
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNH06CC03B
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNX09AG76A
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
LATE EFFECTS OF HEAVY-ION IRRADIATION
VIVO OSTEOBLASTOGENESIS
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