4.5 Article

A Major Effect of Simulated Microgravity on Several Stages of Preimplantation Mouse Development is Lethality Associated With Elevated Phosphorylated SAPK/JNK

Journal

REPRODUCTIVE SCIENCES
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 947-959

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1933719109337544

Keywords

Microgravity; preimplantation; signal transduction; stress activated protein kinase (SAPK/JNK); trophoblast

Funding

  1. NASA [NRA-NAG2-1503]
  2. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, NIH [R01-HD40972]

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We tested whether microgravity affects mouse development during a period when gravity cues chick and frog embryo development. A rotating vessel developed similar to 0.1% simulated microgravity (MGS) for embryos. Microgravity simulation resulted in blocked cell accumulation in E2.5 embryos. E1.5 and E3.5 embryos showed lesser effects. For E1.5/2.5 embryos, cell accumulation block was followed by lethality at 48 hours after MGS. For E3.5 embryos, MGS blocked development without lethality but with apoptosis. E1.5-3.5 embryos from the rotational control developed lesser effects than MGS embryos. Embryonic stress-activated protein kinase (SAPK) was phosphorylated during MGS and mediated apoptosis. Increased pSAPK suggested that lethality is due to cellular stress induced by MGS, unlike the dysfunctional development after gravitational disorientation in frog and chick embryos. Thus, MGS causes lethality, a novel phenotype not often observed in microgravity or MGS. Embryonic lethality at E2.5 and apoptosis at E3.5 are associated with SAPK function, suggesting that MGS causes a general stress response that immediately affects many aspects of development. In addition, MGS and many aspects of In vitro fertilization/assisted reproductive technologies (IVF/ART) produce nonphysiological, nonevolutionary stresses that are mediated by SAPK, suggesting the primacy of this protein kinase in a wide range of mechanisms mediating negative reproductive outcomes in IVF/ART and potentially in spaceflight.

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