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4 February 2011 Effect of Solar Particle Event Radiation on Gastrointestinal Tract Bacterial Translocation and Immune Activation
Houping Ni, Klara Balint, Yu Zhou, Daila S Gridley, Casey Maks, Ann R Kennedy, Drew Weissman
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Abstract

Space flight conditions within the protection of Earth's gravitational field have been shown to alter immune responses, which could lead to potentially detrimental pathology. An additional risk of extended space travel outside the Earth's gravitational field is the effect of solar particle event (SPE) radiation exposure on the immune system. Organisms that could lead to infection include endogenous, latent viruses, colonizing pathogenics, and commensals, as well as exogenous microbes present in the spacecraft or other astronauts. In this report, the effect of SPE-like radiation on containment of commensal bacteria and the innate immune response induced by its breakdown was investigated at the radiation energies, doses and dose rates expected during an extravehicular excursion outside the Earth's gravitational field. A transient increase in serum lipopolysaccharide was observed 1 day after irradiation and was accompanied by an increase in acute-phase reactants and circulating proinflammatory cytokines, indicating immune activation. Baseline levels were reestablished by 5 days postirradiation. These findings suggest that astronauts exposed to SPE radiation could have impaired containment of colonizing bacteria and associated immune activation.

by Radiation Research Society
Houping Ni, Klara Balint, Yu Zhou, Daila S Gridley, Casey Maks, Ann R Kennedy, and Drew Weissman "Effect of Solar Particle Event Radiation on Gastrointestinal Tract Bacterial Translocation and Immune Activation," Radiation Research 175(4), 485-492, (4 February 2011). https://doi.org/10.1667/RR2373.1
Received: 21 July 2010; Accepted: 1 November 2010; Published: 4 February 2011
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