Cells (Sep 2024)

Microgravity Effect on Pancreatic Islets

  • Lukas Zeger,
  • Povilas Barasa,
  • Yilin Han,
  • Josefin Hellgren,
  • Itedale Namro Redwan,
  • Myrthe E. Reiche,
  • Gunnar Florin,
  • Gustaf Christoffersson,
  • Elena N. Kozlova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells13181588
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 18
p. 1588

Abstract

Read online

We previously demonstrated that boundary cap neural crest stem cells (BCs) induce the proliferation of beta-cells in vitro, increase survival of pancreatic islets (PIs) in vivo after transplantation, and themselves strongly increase their proliferation capacity after exposure to space conditions. Therefore, we asked if space conditions can induce the proliferation of beta-cells when PIs are alone or together with BCs in free-floating or 3D-printed form. During the MASER 15 sounding rocket experiment, half of the cells were exposed to 6 min of microgravity (µg), whereas another group of cells were kept in 1 g conditions in a centrifuge onboard. The proliferation marker EdU was added to the cells just before the rocket reached µg conditions. The morphological assessment revealed that PIs successfully survived and strongly proliferated, particularly in the free-floating condition, though the fusion of PIs hampered statistical analysis. Proliferation of beta-cells was displayed in 3D-printed islets two weeks after µg exposure, suggesting that the effects of µg may be delayed. Thus, PIs in 3D-printed scaffolds did not fuse, and this preparation is more suitable than free-floating specimens for morphological analysis in µg studies. PIs maintained their increased proliferation capacity for weeks after µg exposure, an effect that may not appear directly, but can emerge after a delay.

Keywords