Impact of a simulated gravity load for atmospheric reentry, 10Â g for 2Â min, on conscious mice
[摘要] The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency recently performed a mouse experiment in the International Space Station in which mice were raised for 35Â days, retrieved using the Dragon spacecraft, and then harvested for analysis 2Â days after splashdown. However, the impact of the retrieval procedure, which exposed mice to 5â10Â g for 2Â min during atmospheric reentry and splashdown, was unknown. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to examine the impact of a 10Â g load for 2Â min (using a gondola-type centrifuge with a 1.5-m arm installed at Gifu University) on conscious mice. Plasma corticosterone increased at 30Â min after load application and recovered at 90Â min. Significant Fos expression was observed in the vestibular nuclei (VeN), paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus (PVN), and central nucleus of the amygdala (CeA). Rearing behavior and food intake were suppressed. Mice with vestibular lesions demonstrated increased corticosterone and Fos expression in the PVN, but neither suppression of food intake and rearing behavior nor increased Fos expression in the VeN and CeA. These results suggest that the simulated gravity load induced a transient stress response, hypoactivity, and a vestibular-mediated suppression of food intake.
[发布日期] [发布机构]
[效力级别] [学科分类] 生理学
[关键词] Hypergravity ;Atmospheric reentry ;Fos ;Corticosterone ;Vestibular lesion [时效性]