Secretome profiling reveals acute changes in oxidative stress, brain homeostasis, and coagulation following short-duration spaceflight
-
Published:2024-06-11
Issue:1
Volume:15
Page:
-
ISSN:2041-1723
-
Container-title:Nature Communications
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Nat Commun
Author:
Houerbi Nadia, Kim JangKeunORCID, Overbey Eliah G.ORCID, Batra RichaORCID, Schweickart AnnaliseORCID, Patras Laura, Lucotti Serena, Ryon Krista A., Najjar DeenaORCID, Meydan CemORCID, Damle Namita, Chin ChristopherORCID, Narayanan S. Anand, Guarnieri Joseph W., Widjaja Gabrielle, Beheshti AfshinORCID, Tobias Gabriel, Vatter Fanny, Hirschberg Jeremy Wain, Kleinman Ashley, Afshin Evan E., MacKay Matthew, Chen Qiuying, Miller Dawson, Gajadhar Aaron S., Williamson Lucy, Tandel Purvi, Yang Qiu, Chu Jessica, Benz Ryan, Siddiqui Asim, Hornburg Daniel, Gross Steven, Shirah BaderORCID, Krumsiek JanORCID, Mateus Jaime, Mao XiaoORCID, Matei IrinaORCID, Mason Christopher E.ORCID
Abstract
AbstractAs spaceflight becomes more common with commercial crews, blood-based measures of crew health can guide both astronaut biomedicine and countermeasures. By profiling plasma proteins, metabolites, and extracellular vesicles/particles (EVPs) from the SpaceX Inspiration4 crew, we generated “spaceflight secretome profiles,” which showed significant differences in coagulation, oxidative stress, and brain-enriched proteins. While >93% of differentially abundant proteins (DAPs) in vesicles and metabolites recovered within six months, the majority (73%) of plasma DAPs were still perturbed post-flight. Moreover, these proteomic alterations correlated better with peripheral blood mononuclear cells than whole blood, suggesting that immune cells contribute more DAPs than erythrocytes. Finally, to discern possible mechanisms leading to brain-enriched protein detection and blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption, we examined protein changes in dissected brains of spaceflight mice, which showed increases in PECAM-1, a marker of BBB integrity. These data highlight how even short-duration spaceflight can disrupt human and murine physiology and identify spaceflight biomarkers that can guide countermeasure development.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference100 articles.
1. Afshinnekoo, E. et al. Fundamental Biological Features of Spaceflight: Advancing the Field to Enable Deep-Space Exploration. Cell 183, 1162–1184 (2020). 2. Kliuchnikova, A. A. et al. Blood Plasma Proteome: A Meta-Analysis of the Results of Protein Quantification in Human Blood by Targeted Mass Spectrometry. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 24, 769 (2023). 3. Brzhozovskiy, A. G. et al. The Effects of Spaceflight Factors on the Human Plasma Proteome, Including Both Real Space Missions and Ground-Based Experiments. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 20, 3194 (2019). 4. Larina, I. M. et al. Protein expression changes caused by spaceflight as measured for 18 Russian cosmonauts. Sci. Rep. 7, 8142 (2017). 5. Martin, D., Makedonas, G., Crucian, B., Peanlikhit, T. & Rithidech, K. The use of the multidimensional protein identification technology (MudPIT) to analyze plasma proteome of astronauts collected before, during, and after spaceflights. Acta. Astronaut 193, 9–19 (2022).
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|