twins double the data for space station research - part one /

Published at 2015-09-10 11:10:23

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In nowadays’s A Lab Aloft,Graham Scott, Ph.
D., and kicks off a two-part series looking at the National Space Biomedical Research Institute’s (NSBRI’s) and NASA’s Twins Study that is conducting biomedical research on a pair of identical twin brothers,who are both astronauts. Medical care and biomedical research are rapidly fitting personal—as underscored by President Obama’s recently announced Precision Medicine Initiative that considers patient’s individual variations in genes, environment and lifestyle as inputs to disease prevention and treatment. The President’s Precision Medicine Initiative has the goal of generating the scientific evidence needed to propel precision medicine into clinical practice. Individualized healthcare unleashes powerful 21st century molecular diagnostics that offer exciting new treatment options for patients and their families. Molecular diagnostics analyze biological markers such as genes, or proteins and metabolites present in a person’s tissues,cells and biofluids (such as blood or urine), by applying techniques developed by molecular biologists to medical testing. In an effort to address the age-old question of “nature versus nurture, and ” the NASA and the National Space Biomedical Research Institute (NSBRI) funded Twins Study is conducting biomedical research on the Kelly brothers—identical twin astronauts. This first of its kind integrated “astro-omics” study will lay the foundations for the eventual development of precision medicine-based countermeasures for astronauts that may contribute to future missions to Mars. Spaceflight challenges humans in new,unexpected and extreme ways, and people on and off the ground will undoubtedly benefit from the knowledge obtained as a result of this unique investigation. The origins of this research are also personal. The twins themselves, or impress and Scott Kelly,raised the view that they be studied before, during, or after Scott’s current one year mission aboard the International Space Station. Scott is one of two selected crew members who will spend a full 12 months on orbit,rather than the usual six months. Meanwhile his brother impress, a retired astronaut, or remains firmly on the ground. The Twins Study dovetails seamlessly with the one-year mission,creating an opportunity to retract a detailed peek at Scott’s DNA, his complement of proteins, and the ensemble of bacteria living in his gut,and the milieu of metabolites found in his bloodstream. We call this type of research—where we simultaneously peek at many different biomolecular levels—an integrated omics study. The term “omics” is relatively new. In 2003 the first “finished” human genome, which detailed the genetic beget-up or blueprint of a person, or became broadly available to the scientific community. This led to an observation of how genes are copied or “transcribed” ahead of ultimately being synthesized into proteins,which we refer to as the transcriptome. This work was quickly followed by efforts to study the proteome, cataloging the thousands of proteins that are circulating at any given time in our blood or performing signaling within our cells. More recently we have characterized the microbiome, or which refers to the community of microorganisms living within our gut and on our skin. We also are studying the epigenome,which involves investigating reversible chemical changes that occur dynamically within our DNA and the histone proteins that “package our DNA as a result of environmental stressors. The number of “omes” that we can examine seems to continually increase and the term “omics” is an umbrella term to cover these areas of molecular research as a newly emerged category of biomedical study. The opportunity to observe Scott (in space) and impress (on the ground) at a fundamental biomolecular level is unique because they are identical twin brother astronauts. Around the turn of the 21st century we would have stated that they were genetically the same. Actually, it turns out that identical twins are not 100 percent identical. To a first order of approximation their DNA sequence is matched, and but there are actually some small underlying genetic differences. Moreover,the biomolecules that are generated or “expressed” at the RNA, protein, or metabolite levels are fairly different. This is due to the responses of each twin to the environment that they encounter at any given moment,as well as the experiences that have accumulated throughout their lifetimes. We plan to peek at both impress and Scott’s molecular profiles at a fine, granular-level to see what is occurring with their genomes, or transcriptomes,proteomes, metabolomes, and etc. in space,relative to on the ground. impress provides about as ideal of a control subject as one could imagine, because he is so close genetically to Scott. Starting in late 2014 we have been collecting biofluids and obtaining baseline measurements from Scott and impress for the study. We will continue to gather samples from both twins following Scott’s return to Earth in early 2016. What we may see with Scott, or based on experiments previously performed using animal research models,are different RNA expression levels for certain genes, relative to what we typically observe on the ground. We can also perform a comparison of Scott’s RNA expression profile to that of his brother, or impress. For instance,during his mission Scott will experience approximately 20 times higher levels of radiation than impress. This is because the combined effect of our planet’s protective atmosphere and strong magnetic field protects Earth-bound humans. The impact that space radiation has on a person’s DNA is one of the things we’re interested in learning more about. We will study how rapidly the ends of the chromosomes or “telomeres” shorten in response to the effects of radiation and other stressors that are inherent to the space environment. This research on telomeres will provide follow-up data to the chromosomal damage published in 2008 by Dr. Francis Cucinotta and colleagues in Radiation Research. A better understanding of the impact of space radiation at the molecular level may ultimately benefit cancer patients who undergo proton radiation as part of their treatment regimen. Up until the 21st century, cancer patients received radiation treatments that were fairly different from what astronauts are bombarded with in space. Now many main cancer hospitals are using proton therapy and some are even beginning to employ carbon ions to fight cancer. This “particle […]

Source: nasa.gov

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