ESA title
Science & Exploration

Goldfinger

26/03/2013 5740 views 42 likes
ESA / Science & Exploration / Human and Robotic Exploration / Research

The internal structure of a human cell in simulated gravity taken on the International Space Station. Pictured here is a monocyte immune cell that plays an integral role in protecting our bodies from foreign invaders such as bacteria and viruses.

Immune cells were placed on gold-coated slides inside ESA’s Kubik incubator. As the cells migrated they removed the gold, allowing researchers on Earth to measure their movements in space. To record this image, antibodies that light up under a fluorescence microscope were added to reveal colours and identify specific proteins.

Some cells, such as those in muscles and our immune system, are called motile when they actively move and consume energy. Others, such as those that line our blood vessels, are non-motile. Knowing how spaceflight affects the motility of cells is important for astronauts and mission designers.

Cell motility depends on the integrity of the internal cell structure, which is known as the cytoskeleton. Researchers from the University of Sassari, ETH Zürich’s Space Biology Group and Zero g-LifeTec found that cytoskeleton changes in weightlessness lead to reduced motility.

This process may be one of the reasons why astronauts suffer from weakened immune systems when living in space.

Humans bodies have evolved to live on Earthly gravity. Astronauts’ bodies adapt to living in weightlessness in many ways. Comparing human cells in weightlessness and simulated gravity in space allows researchers to understand how gravity affects the inner working of our bodies, which may help to prepare astronauts for further exploration of our Solar System.

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