Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.

Rodents provide a useful analog for understanding the effects of spaceflight on the human body, offering opportunities for investigations into the relationship between microgravity and the musculoskeletal system. In particular, rodents have often been utilized to improve our understanding of the eff...

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Main Authors: Shiyin Lim, Joanna E Veres, Eduardo A C Almeida, Grace D O'Connell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0301316
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author Shiyin Lim
Joanna E Veres
Eduardo A C Almeida
Grace D O'Connell
author_facet Shiyin Lim
Joanna E Veres
Eduardo A C Almeida
Grace D O'Connell
author_sort Shiyin Lim
collection DOAJ
description Rodents provide a useful analog for understanding the effects of spaceflight on the human body, offering opportunities for investigations into the relationship between microgravity and the musculoskeletal system. In particular, rodents have often been utilized to improve our understanding of the effects of spaceflight on the spine, including intervertebral disc and vertebral body health. However, there are a number of experimental factors that differ between existing works, including mission duration, animal housing, and anatomical location of interest, making it difficult to draw holistic conclusions. Additionally, the quadrupedal nature of the murine spine results in different biomechanical loading than in a bipedal organism. Thus, the objective of this study was to more fully define the bulk properties of the murine lumbar spine model after 28 days of spaceflight. Additionally, the proximal tibia was analyzed to provide insight into the skeletal site-specificity of gravitational unloading in space. Results indicated that the effects of spaceflight on vertebral body bone microarchitecture, intervertebral disc biochemistry, and intervertebral disc joint mechanics were statistically insignificant, while large and significant bone loss was observed in the proximal tibia of the same animals. We hypothesize that this may be due to site-specific loading changes in space. Specifically, vigorous ambulatory behaviors observed in this experiment after initial acclimation to spaceflight may increase axial load-bearing in the lumbar spine, while maintaining microgravity induced mechanical unloading in the tibia. In total, this work shows that the rodent spine, unlike the weight bearing tibia in the same mice, is not affected by gravitational unloading, suggesting the tissue degenerative effects of spaceflight are site- and load-specific and not systemic. This study also highlights the importance of considering experimental variables such as habitat acclimation, physical activity, and experiment duration as key factors in determining musculoskeletal and spine health outcomes during spaceflight.
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spelling doaj-art-95abc5969f024bcb8cc8b4d3e4ceab4f2025-08-20T01:55:28ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01205e030131610.1371/journal.pone.0301316Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.Shiyin LimJoanna E VeresEduardo A C AlmeidaGrace D O'ConnellRodents provide a useful analog for understanding the effects of spaceflight on the human body, offering opportunities for investigations into the relationship between microgravity and the musculoskeletal system. In particular, rodents have often been utilized to improve our understanding of the effects of spaceflight on the spine, including intervertebral disc and vertebral body health. However, there are a number of experimental factors that differ between existing works, including mission duration, animal housing, and anatomical location of interest, making it difficult to draw holistic conclusions. Additionally, the quadrupedal nature of the murine spine results in different biomechanical loading than in a bipedal organism. Thus, the objective of this study was to more fully define the bulk properties of the murine lumbar spine model after 28 days of spaceflight. Additionally, the proximal tibia was analyzed to provide insight into the skeletal site-specificity of gravitational unloading in space. Results indicated that the effects of spaceflight on vertebral body bone microarchitecture, intervertebral disc biochemistry, and intervertebral disc joint mechanics were statistically insignificant, while large and significant bone loss was observed in the proximal tibia of the same animals. We hypothesize that this may be due to site-specific loading changes in space. Specifically, vigorous ambulatory behaviors observed in this experiment after initial acclimation to spaceflight may increase axial load-bearing in the lumbar spine, while maintaining microgravity induced mechanical unloading in the tibia. In total, this work shows that the rodent spine, unlike the weight bearing tibia in the same mice, is not affected by gravitational unloading, suggesting the tissue degenerative effects of spaceflight are site- and load-specific and not systemic. This study also highlights the importance of considering experimental variables such as habitat acclimation, physical activity, and experiment duration as key factors in determining musculoskeletal and spine health outcomes during spaceflight.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0301316
spellingShingle Shiyin Lim
Joanna E Veres
Eduardo A C Almeida
Grace D O'Connell
Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.
PLoS ONE
title Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.
title_full Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.
title_fullStr Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.
title_full_unstemmed Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.
title_short Characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies.
title_sort characterization of the murine spine for spaceflight studies
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0301316
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AT joannaeveres characterizationofthemurinespineforspaceflightstudies
AT eduardoacalmeida characterizationofthemurinespineforspaceflightstudies
AT gracedoconnell characterizationofthemurinespineforspaceflightstudies