Circulating miRNA Spaceflight Signature Reveals Targets for Countermeasure Development

We have identified and validated a spaceflight-associated microRNA (miRNA) signature that is shared by rodents and humans in response to simulated, short-duration and long-duration spaceflight. Previous studies have identified miRNAs that regulate rodent responses to spaceflight in low-Earth orbit, and we have confirmed the expression of these proposed spaceflight-associated miRNAs in rodents reacting to simulated spaceflight conditions. Moreover, astronaut samples from the NASA Twins Study confirmed these expression signatures in miRNA sequencing, single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), and single-cell assay for transposase accessible chromatin (scATAC-seq) data. Additionally, a subset of these miRNAs (miR-125, miR-16, and let-7a) was found to regulate vascular damage caused by simulated deep space radiation. To demonstrate the physiological relevance of key spaceflight-associated miRNAs, we utilized antagomirs to inhibit their expression and successfully rescue simulated deep-space-radiation-mediated damage in human 3D vascular constructs.

Reference

Malkani, S., Chin, C.R., Cekanviciute, E., … Blaber, E.A., Schisler J.C., Vanderburg, C., Friedlander, M.R., Mcdonald, J.T., Costes, S.V., Rutkove S., Grabham, P., Mason, C.E., Beheshti A. (2020), " Circulating miRNA Spaceflight Signature Reveals Targets for Countermeasure Development ,"

Cell Reports 33 (10) 108448