Acute and short-term fluctuations in gravity are associated with changes in circulatory plasma protein levels
Alexander Lang, Stephan Binneboessel, Fabian Nienhaus, Raphael Romano Bruno, Georg Wolff, Kerstin Piayda, Susanne Pfeiler, Hakima Ezzahoini, Daniel Oehler, Malte Kelm, Holger Winkels, Norbert Gerdes, Christian Jung

TL;DR
Changes in gravity during parabolic flights affect plasma proteins linked to cellular processes like apoptosis and vesicle organization.
Contribution
A publicly available library of gravity-modulated plasma proteins was created, revealing novel insights into physiological changes during microgravity.
Findings
251 plasma proteins showed differential regulation after parabolic flight exposure.
Altered proteins were linked to vesicle organization and apoptosis pathways.
Physiological changes included stress responses and fluid shifts due to gravity fluctuations.
Abstract
Gravitational changes between micro- and hypergravity cause several adaptations and alterations in the human body. Besides muscular atrophy and immune system impairment, effects on the circulatory system have been described, which can be associated with a wide range of blood biomarker changes. This study examined nine individuals (seven males, two females) during a parabolic flight campaign (PFC). Thirty-one parabolas were performed in one flight day, resulting in ~22 s of microgravity during each parabola. Each participant was subjected to a single flight day with a total of 31 parabolas, totaling 11 min of microgravity during one parabolic flight. Before and after (1 hour (h) and 24 h), the flights blood was sampled to examine potential gravity-induced changes of circulating plasma proteins. Proximity Extension Assay (PEA) offers a proteomic solution, enabling the simultaneous…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsSamuel Beckett and Modernism
