The Freeman

Year in space put US astronaut’s disease defenses on alert

- (AP)

WASHINGTON— Nearly a year in space put astronaut Scott Kelly’s immune system on high alert and changed the activity of some of his genes compared to his Earth-bound identical twin, researcher­s said Friday.

Scientists don’t know if the changes were good or bad but results from a unique NASA twins study are raising new questions for doctors as the space agency aims to send people to Mars.

Tests of the genetic doubles gave scientists a never-before opportunit­y to track details of human biology, such as how an astronaut’s genes turn on and off in space differentl­y than at home. One puzzling change announced Friday at a science conference: Kelly’s immune system was hyperactiv­ated.

“It’s as if the body is reacting to this alien environmen­t sort of like you would a mysterious organism being inside you,” said geneticist Christophe­r Mason of New York’s Weill Cornell Medicine, who helped lead the study. He said doctors are now looking for that in other astronauts.

Since the beginning of space exploratio­n, NASA has studied the toll on astronauts’ bodies, such as bone loss that requires exercise to counter. Typically they’re in space about six months at a time. Kelly, who lived on the Internatio­nal Space Station, spent 340 days in space and set a U.S. record.

“I’ve never felt completely normal in space,” the now-retired Kelly said in an email to The Associated Press, citing the usual congestion from shifting fluid, headaches and difficulty concentrat­ing from extra carbon dioxide, and digestive complaints from microgravi­ty.

But this study was a unique dive into the molecular level, with former astronaut Mark Kelly, Scott’s twin, on the ground for comparison. Full results haven’t yet been published, but researcher­s presented some findings Friday at a meeting of the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science.

A number of genes connected to the immune system became hyperactiv­e, Mason said. It’s not a change in DNA but in what’s called “gene expression,” how genes turn off and on and increase or decrease their production of proteins. Mason also spotted a spike in the bloodstrea­m of another marker that primes the immune system. Yet at the same time, Kelly’s blood showed fewer of another cell type that’s an early defense against viruses.

 ??  ?? Team of experts harvests eggs from female southern white rhino, 17-yearold Hope, at a zoo park in Chorzow, Poland. ASSOCIATED PRESS
Team of experts harvests eggs from female southern white rhino, 17-yearold Hope, at a zoo park in Chorzow, Poland. ASSOCIATED PRESS

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