Cells Need Gravity to Develop 16
grytpype writes "According to a recent news article, a team of French researchers has reported that cells that develop in zero-G conditions fail to form critical "microtubules" needed for proper cell structure. The problem persists even after the affected cells are returned to gravity. The implications for long-term human space travel are interesting."
Re:So spin your station (Score:1)
Re:so what happend to all the mice? (Score:1)
Effects After Birth? (Score:1)
So when you're in zero G, your hair cells die rather than multiplying. Same for the other frequently-multiplying cells: white blood cells, red blood cells, sperm cells, stem cells (cornea, brain, marrow, etc), and cancerous cells.
Re:So which side do I sleep on? (Score:1)
birth control? (Score:1)
freeze up! (Score:1)
Or would this still affect frozen people?
As for 0g sex, short term exposure to 0g would not be harmfull;-)
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If my facts are wrong then tell me. I don't mind.
So spin your station (Score:1)
The article suggests that centrigufal force is just as effective. Have a spinning section of your station that pproximates 1g and spend most of your time in there. You'd probably be more comfortable that way anyway.
This result doesn't really surprise me much. We're adapted to the environment we evolved in.
How does this effect the theory of evolution? (Score:1)
Re:so what happend to all the mice? (Score:1)
Re:Effects After Birth? (Score:1)
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Kevin Mitchell
Re:Your station would have to be huge!! (Score:1)
All valid points but fuel/money isn't one of them.
It is if you have to *launch* the components of a large station
My argument is different - to wit, 'so what'? If you really want to have people living in space for long periods of time, you want to have a lot of people in a fairly large space, or they go stir crazy and develop serious social problems. Mir was not always a fun place. Even a place as "big" as McMurdo station [frozenchosen.net] gets pretty loopy during the winterover. (pop: 200)
Really, if you want people in orbit permanently, you ultimately need to be prepared to send a small city. At which point making it a rotating city (and all the designs are) is not much harder.
Your station would have to be huge!! (Score:1)
Re:Your station would have to be huge!! (Score:1)
Re:Your station would have to be huge!! (Score:2)
You also aren't considering the incredibly large effects of spin on the system. All the systems have to be more complex, not to mention the thermal gradients and all the other wacky things that happen to a space vehicle (I'm an engineer working on the ISS's guidance and control so I know some of the odd things that happen). We're currently spin stabilizing the ISS (we have to stop for thermal reasons once the Z1 truss gets there and for obvious reasons once humans inhabit it in January) and it takes fuel for spins and reboosts and other station keeping maneuvers.
"spining a space station up to 1G wouldn't be particularly expensive or difficult."
To spin something up to 1G to simulate gravity to a decent degree of normality would be require a sizable system. I won't do the math because nobody really cares, but I have seen the numbers and they ain't small. A large system costs more to put in space than a small one (gotta love our gravity hole) so cost is the major issue. If it were reasonable, trust me, they probably would've tried it.
Applicability is not clear... (Score:2)
I looked up the abstract of the original article [pnas.org] because the news article reference wasn't all that clear. It's listed in P.N.A.S. [pnas.org] as a chemistry study, not a biology study.
It appears the researchers were examining self-organization of microtubules in solution, but not actually sending living cells into space. And it's pretty big stretch to extrapolate from a simple chemical solution to living cells in a human body.
I'd hold off for now on calling this study the solution to the question long-term health deterioration in space.
so what happend to all the mice? (Score:3)
I like the bit about the supressed immune system. The the theory for that (in the 1960s) was that the astronauts were all issolated in a germ free areas for long periods before and after flights.