• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

The human heart shows signs of ageing after just a month in space

Spyxos

Gold Member
d41586-024-03105-x_27693626.jpg



Over the course of just one month in space, engineered human heart tissue got weaker, its ‘beating’ patterns became irregular and it underwent molecular and genetic changes that mimicked the effect of ageing. The study offers a useful means of identifying the molecular pathways behind the detrimental effects of spaceflight on the human heart, says Joseph Wu, a cardiologist at Stanford University in California.

Microgravity can be hard on the body, and astronauts exposed to it have experienced cardiovascular changes, such as an irregular heartbeat. But unpicking the effects on the heart of long-duration spaceflight — that lasting for months at a time — and the molecular changes that underpin those changes has remained out of reach, says study co-author Deok-Ho Kim, a biomedical engineer at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland. “It’s not possible to do the different molecular and functional studies in human astronauts,” he says.


A ‘heart’ on a chip​

To overcome this challenge, Kim and his colleagues sent engineered heart tissue to the International Space Station (ISS) for 30 days. To engineer the tissue, the researchers coaxed human induced pluripotent stem cells — which act as blank canvases that can differentiate into any cell type — to develop into human heart muscle cells. The team then strung sets of six tissue samples between pairs of posts. One post in each pair was flexible, allowing the samples to contract like a beating heart. The system, which they call a heart-on-a-chip, was housed in a chamber about half the size of a cellphone.

Once the heart-on-a-chip system was on board the ISS, Kim and his colleagues used sensors to monitor the strength of the tissues’ contraction and beating patterns in real time. For comparison, they monitored another set of tissue samples that remained on Earth.

After 12 days on the ISS, the tissues’ contraction strength had almost halved, whereas that of their on-ground counterparts had remained relatively stable. This weakening was still apparent even after nine days of recovery back on Earth. In space, the tissues’ beats also became more irregular over time, with the period between each beat increasing by more than five times at day 19. But this irregularity disappeared after the samples came back to Earth. This suggests that NASA astronauts Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore — who have been stuck on the ISS for months owing to technical problems with Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft — are probably experiencing cardiovascular stress that will resolve after they return to Earth, say Wu.

Genetic changes​

After getting the tissues back from space, Kim and his colleagues used transmission electron microscopy to look at the samples’ sarcomeres — strands of proteins responsible for muscle contractions. After being in orbit for a month, these protein bundles had become shorter and more disordered compared with those in the tissues that had remained on the ground. The mitochondria — the energy-producing machinery inside cells — had also become swollen and fragmented.

When the researchers sequenced the tissue samples’ RNA, they found an increase in the expression of genes and signalling pathways associated with inflammation and heart disorders in tissues that had travelled on the ISS. Meanwhile, genes that produce proteins required for normal heart contraction and mitochondrial function showed signs of reduced expression.

Although the study’s heart-on-a-chip approach is innovative, it doesn’t capture other important cardiovascular changes that can occur in the human heart, such as pressure in the arteries, says Wu. But he adds that a similar set-up could be useful for studying how other organs fare under microgravity and harsh radiation levels. “The platform’s ability to function in a microgravity setting whilst maintaining tissue viability is a major advantage,” he says.

Kim and his colleagues are planning to send other heart and organ tissues into space for a longer period to investigate the effects of spaceflight more deeply. They also hope to test drugs that can counteract some of the impacts of microgravity on the heart.

 

GymWolf

Gold Member
Thank god i was too stupid and lazy to study for the international space academy here in sicily.
 
Last edited:

YuLY

Member
Probably why we need artificial gravity if we ever wanna get serious about interstellar travel. But even floaty ships will get us to Mars so theres that, kinda hyped to see a human on Mars in our lifetime.
 

Pejo

Member
Man, this along with the study that shows space radiation fucks your kidneys isn't a great starting point for space travel for humans.

Drones it is for the foreseeable future then, I guess.
 

Dirk Benedict

Gold Member
So, our bone density reduces and our heart muscle ages rapidly. Two things detrimental to us, while traveling Space.
Edit: Now, I am curious about The Brain, blood, etc.
 
Last edited:

IDKFA

I am Become Bilbo Baggins
Transferring our consciousness into robotic bodies is the way forward if we want to become a spacefaring civilization.

Not a fan of this idea. It would remove everything that makes us human. We'd just be conscious robot husks without emotion.

There are other ways we can become a spacefaring civilisation without sacrificing our humanity.
 

daffyduck

Member
Not a fan of this idea. It would remove everything that makes us human. We'd just be conscious robot husks without emotion.

There are other ways we can become a spacefaring civilisation without sacrificing our humanity.
I don’t think it would be possible anyway. A facsimile maybe, but not actually you.
 

StueyDuck

Member
Eh... this experiment is a bit weird.

The human body tries to react heal and recover. Like the study itself even says they can't really do a real test on humans.

Sounds like they just sent some meat up and pumped it and saw the after effects.
 
Last edited:

efyu_lemonardo

May I have a cookie?
Not a fan of this idea. It would remove everything that makes us human. We'd just be conscious robot husks without emotion.

There are other ways we can become a spacefaring civilisation without sacrificing our humanity.
It seems much more logical to me that we would modify ourselves instead of modifying the vast number of different environments that exist outside of earth to suit our very particular physiology.

As far as lacking emotion, I don't think there is any reason that should be the case. We're not talking about the bulky metal machines that exist today. Rather, something far more advanced and flexible.
 
Last edited:

Pagusas

Elden Member
so those Boeing astronauts stuck on the ISS get to enjoy heart damage from Boeing's fuck up too? The company that just keeps giving.
 

IDKFA

I am Become Bilbo Baggins
As far as lacking emotion, I don't think there is any reason that should be the case. We're not talking about the bulky metal machines that exist today. Rather, something far more advanced and flexible.

The reason we feel happiness, sadness, love, euphoria, anxiety etc is because of the biochemistry in our bodies and brains. Without this biochemistry we wouldn't have any emotions. You wouldn't get this complex biochemistry by just transfering the mind.
 

MikeM

Gold Member
To be expected. Our bodies were designed for consistent pressure and gravity. Take one of those major things out and bad things will happen.

We need to figure out artificial gravity of we are to get serious about space travel.
 

efyu_lemonardo

May I have a cookie?
The reason we feel happiness, sadness, love, euphoria, anxiety etc is because of the biochemistry in our bodies and brains. Without this biochemistry we wouldn't have any emotions. You wouldn't get this complex biochemistry by just transfering the mind.
This is getting a bit vague and philosophical, but what you call "the mind" and what I call "our consciousness" doesn't have to mean only "the contents of the brain". It can extend to the nervous system and other other networks within our body.

With sufficiently advanced technology, these wouldn't have to be precisely copied, but they could be emulated to a high enough degree of precision so that what we'd be transferring would be akin to a "sense of self", including equivalents to proprioception, hormonal, emotional and metabolic regulation, sensory, neurological and cognitive functions, etc.

Essentially I'm talking about transferring the "feeling that you're you". There is continuing research that suggests this may be possible some day.

Here are some videos recreating very early experiments that may have been first performed in the 19th century.

There are more advanced studies available if you want to learn more:



 
Last edited:

IDKFA

I am Become Bilbo Baggins
This is getting a bit vague and philosophical, but what you call "the mind" and what I call "our consciousness" doesn't have to mean only "the contents of the brain". It can extend to the nervous system and other other networks within our body.

With sufficiently advanced technology, these wouldn't have to be precisely copied, but they could be emulated to a high enough degree of precision so that what we'd be transferring would be akin to a "sense of self", including equivalents to proprioception, hormonal, emotional and metabolic regulation, sensory, neurological and cognitive functions, etc.

Essentially I'm talking about transferring the "feeling that you're you". There is continuing research that suggests this may be possible some day.

Here are some videos recreating very early experiments that may have been first performed in the 19th century.

There are more advanced studies available if you want to learn more:





Sorry mate. I'm now 5 beers deep. We'll continue tomorrow
 

SF Kosmo

Al Jazeera Special Reporter
I don't know why anyone would want to be an astronaut. Like really, you're gonna shoot me on a rocket into low orbit so I can be locked in a school bus sized tube for 6 months with no gravity? Get fucked, I would rather go to jail than go to space.
 

Synless

Member
I don't know why anyone would want to be an astronaut. Like really, you're gonna shoot me on a rocket into low orbit so I can be locked in a school bus sized tube for 6 months with no gravity? Get fucked, I would rather go to jail than go to space.
Some people are meant to push the boundaries of what humans can be and do. Others like you and I are meant to churn the wheel for others ambitions.
 

SF Kosmo

Al Jazeera Special Reporter
Some people are meant to push the boundaries of what humans can be and do. Others like you and I are meant to churn the wheel for others ambitions.
The real work of space exploration is done by shooting probes and robots really far into space to check out shit we've never seen before. A bunch of twats hanging around in a tube in low orbit 250 miles away isn't "exploring space." They aren't charting the fucking galaxy, they're just losing bone mass and eating from a thoothpaste tube on the government dime.
 
Space is evil lol, it won't be homo sapiens that colonises the solar system. Perhaps some genetically engineered sub species... If that is even possible
 
It's just the lack of gravity, not space AIDS. We can create artificial gravity by spinning, and we can shield radiation with enough mass. Certainly not insurmountable obstacles, though I agree it's simpler to send probes. I'd like to see the next space station incorporate spin gravity, no idea what the engineering challenges would be though.
 
Top Bottom