Immune responses to the in vitro LPS assault engineered in the spaceflight multi-omics study

Microgravity alters the immune response to in vitro LPS assault engineered in spaceflight: A multi-omics study Microgravity can facilitate creation of a potent environment for opportunistic infection by augmenting virulence and suppressing the host defense. Presumably extraterrestrial infection may trigger potentially novel bionetworks different from the terrestrial equivalent which could only be probed by investigating the host-pathogen relationship with minimum terrestrial bias. Towards this objective we strategically engineered a cell culture module equipped with a feedback controlled semi-automated platform to expose human endothelial cells to lipopolysaccharide (LPS). The assay was carried out in the STS-135 space shuttle and a concurrent ground study constituted the baseline. Transcriptomic investigation revealed an immune blunting in microgravity; Lbp MyD88 and MD-2 failed to encode proteins responsible for early LPS uptake. Longer exposure results implied that there was a delayed response potentially ineffectual in preventing pathogens from opportunistically modulating the infection network. Lack of recruitment of growth factors and a debilitated apoptosome supported this potential explanation. Certain cytokines such as IL-6 and IL-8 surged in response to LPS insult in microgravity. Contrasting expressions of B2M TIMP-1 and VEGRs suggested impaired pro-survival adaptation and healing mechanisms. The susceptibility of oxidative stress and immune regulation to microgravity compelled further investigation of the respective microRNA modulators such as miR-200a and miR-146b. These miRNAs were expressed differently in response to LPS assaults in different gravitational limits. In conclusion despite a serious drawback attributed to the small sample size we delineated some of the important aspects of the extraterrestrial etiology; more comprehensive follow up studies are warranted. Present study though compromised by the small sample size was able to shade lights on several aspects of immunological responses to the endotoxic assault mediated by uG. Implementing the host-pathogen interactions in the spaceflight and subsequently lysing the cells onboard presented the critical distinguishing features of the present study from the past reports. We identified the CCM of Tissue Genesis Inc. HI as the suitable hardware system to carry out the experiment in the spaceflight. CCM is an automated feedback controlled module that can concurrently support 24 bioreactors following protocols exclusively programmed for individual bioreactor. For this experiment we use samples EA41 EA 47 EA45 and EA155 that were exposed to LPS for 4 hours. Samples EA123 EA165 EA127 EA126 were exposed to LPS for 8Hrs. Samples EA33 EA 125 EA79 and EA 39 were controls in this experiment.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Maintainer GeneLab Outreach
Last Updated April 23, 2025, 10:46 PM (UTC+00:00)
Created March 31, 2025, 6:16 PM (UTC+00:00)
accessLevel public
accrualPeriodicity irregular
bureauCode 026:00
catalog_@context https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.jsonld
catalog_@id https://data.nasa.gov/data.json
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
harvest_object_id ef2309dc-5e37-4180-b5ad-4dcbc9b4cf70
harvest_source_id 61638e72-b36c-4866-9d28-551a3062f158
harvest_source_title DNG Legacy Data
identifier nasa_genelab_GLDS-54_eca5-kixu
issued 2018-06-26
landingPage https://data.nasa.gov/dataset/immune-responses-to-the-in-vitro-lps-assault-engineered-in-the-spaceflight-multi-omics-stu
modified 2023-01-26
programCode 026:005
publisher National Aeronautics and Space Administration
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash 0bba397a37093f409f5a9e7200f21c03918c6888bf9d56a4b041abad2be7d7fb
source_schema_version 1.1
theme "Earth Science"