Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1717285 | Acta Astronautica | 2006 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The differences observed between microgravity exposed samples and 1Ãg control samples on ground in a typical cell biological space experiment may be explained by unwanted side-effects like cosmic rays, launch vibrations or acceleration effects. This study investigated the impact of vibrational stress accompanying a typical launch in the field of radiobiology. Cultures of primary bone marrow cells were hard-mounted on a vibration table in a direction parallel (launch direction) and perpendicular to the cell culture's substrate. The cell cultures were then vibrated according to the qualification tests of Biobox space hardware. The g-levels in those separate directions measured 11.3Ãg and 4.5Ãg rms, respectively. Expression levels of six genes controlling apoptosis or genome damage/repair (c-Fos, Gadd45a, p21, Mdm2, Bax and Hspa4) were quantified with real-time PCR based on a panel of stable genes. A significant change in gene expression was seen in the launch direction. Considering the one-shot philosophy of space experimentation, simultaneous vibration of ground samples at launch of experiments should be mandatory for biological experiments.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Aerospace Engineering
Authors
Philippe Baert, Tim Van Cleynenbreugel, Jo Vandesompele, Sofie De Schynkel, Jos Vander Sloten, Patrick Van Oostveldt,