4.6 Article

Simulated Microgravity Modulates Focal Adhesion Gene Expression in Human Neural Stem Progenitor Cells

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life12111827

Keywords

microgravity; space conditions; human neural stem progenitor cells; focal adhesion; laminin

Funding

  1. Italian Space Agency grant: MARS-PRE MARcatori biologici e funzionali per la medicina aStronautica di PREcisione (2019-2022)
  2. Swedish Research Council

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The study found that exposure to simulated microgravity induced significant morphological and gene expression changes in human neural stem progenitor cells cultured at low-cell-density, but these effects were much less prominent in cultures with high-cell-density. Additionally, genes modulated by reduced gravity also showed similar changes in cells grown without laminin in non-adherent culture conditions under normal gravity.
We analyzed the morphology and the transcriptomic changes of human neural stem progenitor cells (hNSPCs) grown on laminin in adherent culture conditions and subjected to simulated microgravity for different times in a random positioning machine apparatus. Low-cell-density cultures exposed to simulated microgravity for 24 h showed cell aggregate formation and significant modulation of several genes involved in focal adhesion, cytoskeleton regulation, and cell cycle control. These effects were much more limited in hNSPCs cultured at high density in the same conditions. We also found that some of the genes modulated upon exposure to simulated microgravity showed similar changes in hNSPCs grown without laminin in non-adherent culture conditions under normal gravity. These results suggest that reduced gravity counteracts the interactions of cells with the extracellular matrix, inducing morphological and transcriptional changes that can be observed in low-density cultures.

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