Protection against neurodegenerative disease on Earth and in space

All living organisms have evolutionarily adapted themselves to the Earth’s gravity, and failure to adapt to gravity changes may lead to pathological conditions. This perspective may also apply to abnormal aging observed in bedridden elderly patients with aging-associated diseases such as osteoporosi...

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Veröffentlicht in:NPJ microgravity 2016-04, Vol.2 (1), p.16013-16013, Article 16013
Hauptverfasser: Takamatsu, Yoshiki, Koike, Wakako, Takenouchi, Takato, Sugama, Shuei, Wei, Jianshe, Waragai, Masaaki, Sekiyama, Kazunari, Hashimoto, Makoto
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container_title NPJ microgravity
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creator Takamatsu, Yoshiki
Koike, Wakako
Takenouchi, Takato
Sugama, Shuei
Wei, Jianshe
Waragai, Masaaki
Sekiyama, Kazunari
Hashimoto, Makoto
description All living organisms have evolutionarily adapted themselves to the Earth’s gravity, and failure to adapt to gravity changes may lead to pathological conditions. This perspective may also apply to abnormal aging observed in bedridden elderly patients with aging-associated diseases such as osteoporosis and sarcopenia. Given that bedridden elderly patients are partially analogous to astronauts in that both cannot experience the beneficial effects of gravity on the skeletal system and may suffer from bone loss and muscle weakness, one may wonder whether there are gravity-related mechanisms underlying diseases among the elderly. In contrast to numerous studies of the relevance of microgravity in skeletal disorders, little attention has been paid to neurodegenerative diseases. Therefore, the objective of this paper is to discuss the possible relevance of microgravity in these diseases. We particularly noted a proteomics paper showing that levels of hippocampal proteins, including β-synuclein and carboxyl-terminal ubiquitin hydrolase L1, which have been linked to familial neurodegenerative diseases, were significantly decreased in the hippocampus of mice subjected to hindlimb suspension, a model of microgravity. We suggest that microgravity-induced neurodegeneration may be further exacerbated by diabetes and other factors. On the basis of this view, prevention of neurodegenerative diseases through ‘anti-diabetes’ and ‘hypergravity’ approaches may be important as a common therapeutic approach on Earth and in space. Collectively, neurodegenerative diseases and space medicine may be linked to each other more strongly than previously thought.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/npjmgrav.2016.13
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subjects 631/378
692/617/375/365
Applied Microbiology
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biotechnology
Classical and Continuum Physics
Immunology
Life Sciences
perspective
Space Exploration and Astronautics
Space Sciences (including Extraterrestrial Physics
title Protection against neurodegenerative disease on Earth and in space
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