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- Title
Spatial multi-omics of human skin reveals KRAS and inflammatory responses to spaceflight.
- Authors
Park, Jiwoon; Overbey, Eliah G.; Narayanan, S. Anand; Kim, JangKeun; Tierney, Braden T.; Damle, Namita; Najjar, Deena; Ryon, Krista A.; Proszynski, Jacqueline; Kleinman, Ashley; Hirschberg, Jeremy Wain; MacKay, Matthew; Afshin, Evan E.; Granstein, Richard; Gurvitch, Justin; Hudson, Briana M.; Rininger, Aric; Mullane, Sean; Church, Sarah E.; Meydan, Cem
- Abstract
Spaceflight can change metabolic, immunological, and biological homeostasis and cause skin rashes and irritation, yet the molecular basis remains unclear. To investigate the impact of short-duration spaceflight on the skin, we conducted skin biopsies on the Inspiration4 crew members before (L-44) and after (R + 1) flight. Leveraging multi-omics assays including GeoMx™ Digital Spatial Profiler, single-cell RNA/ATAC-seq, and metagenomics/metatranscriptomics, we assessed spatial gene expressions and associated microbial and immune changes across 95 skin regions in four compartments: outer epidermis, inner epidermis, outer dermis, and vasculature. Post-flight samples showed significant up-regulation of genes related to inflammation and KRAS signaling across all skin regions. These spaceflight-associated changes mapped to specific cellular responses, including altered interferon responses, DNA damage, epithelial barrier disruptions, T-cell migration, and hindered regeneration were located primarily in outer tissue compartments. We also linked epithelial disruption to microbial shifts in skin swab and immune cell activity to PBMC single-cell data from the same crew and timepoints. Our findings present the inaugural collection and examination of astronaut skin, offering insights for future space missions and response countermeasures. Here the authors profile skin microenvironment changes in response to spaceflight by performing a multi omics analysis using skin punch biopsies from the crew members of SpaceX Inspiration4 mission comparing before, post launch and one day after return 91 of the 3-day mission.
- Subjects
MULTIOMICS; ASTRONAUTS; RAS oncogenes; INFLAMMATION; SPACE flight; EXANTHEMA; SKIN biopsy; METAGENOMICS
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2024, Vol 15, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-48625-2