哺乳动物在太空中的发育。

April E Ronca
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引用次数: 32

摘要

地球上的生命,以及所有现存物种及其祖先的生殖和个体发育过程,都是在地球重力场的持续影响下进化的。这些考虑提出了关于哺乳动物在太空中繁殖和发育能力的重要问题。在本章中,我回顾了目前我们对太空飞行对发育中的哺乳动物的影响的认识状况。最近的研究首次揭示了空间环境如何影响哺乳动物生殖和发育的关键阶段,即围绕受精、胚胎发生、怀孕、分娩、产后成熟和亲代照料的那些事件。这篇综述强调了胎儿和产后早期的生活,这是哺乳动物航天数据积累最多的发育时期。母体-后代系统,母体和幼崽的协调集合,包括哺乳动物的发育,在这些早期的形成发育阶段是最重要的。现有的研究支持这样一种观点,即在失重的太空中,母亲和后代之间有生物学意义的互动会发生变化。反过来,这些变化可能会影响太空飞行对后代发育的影响。尽管在太空中对怀孕中期的大鼠进行的研究非常成功,但对出生后9天或更早出生的幼鼠进行的研究却一直受到与飞行笼子设计和母体与后代互动受损有关的问题的阻碍。哺乳动物在太空分娩的可能性,这一事件尚未发生,正在考虑之中。综上所述,这些结果表明,迫切需要对哺乳动物在太空中的生殖和发育进行新的研究。栖息地的开发和系统的地面测试是未来幼鼠空间研究的重要前提。总之,这些发现支持了这样一种观点,即由母亲和兄弟姐妹组成的幼年哺乳动物发育的环境对解释太空飞行的影响至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mammalian development in space.

Life on Earth, and thus the reproductive and ontogenetic processes of all extant species and their ancestors, evolved under the constant influence of the Earth's l g gravitational field. These considerations raise important questions about the ability of mammals to reproduce and develop in space. In this chapter, I review the current state of our knowledge of spaceflight effects on developing mammals. Recent studies are revealing the first insights into how the space environment affects critical phases of mammalian reproduction and development, viz., those events surrounding fertilization, embryogenesis, pregnancy, birth, postnatal maturation and parental care. This review emphasizes fetal and early postnatal life, the developmental epochs for which the greatest amounts of mammalian spaceflight data have been amassed. The maternal-offspring system, the coordinated aggregate of mother and young comprising mammalian development, is of primary importance during these early, formative developmental phases. The existing research supports the view that biologically meaningful interactions between mothers and offspring are changed in the weightlessness of space. These changes may, in turn, cloud interpretations of spaceflight effects on developing offspring. Whereas studies of mid-pregnant rats in space have been extraordinarily successful, studies of young rat litters launched at 9 days of postnatal age or earlier, have been encumbered with problems related to the design of in-flight caging and compromised maternal-offspring interactions. Possibilities for mammalian birth in space, an event that has not yet transpired, are considered. In the aggregate, the results indicate a strong need for new studies of mammalian reproduction and development in space. Habitat development and systematic ground-based testing are important prerequisites to future research with young postnatal rodents in space. Together, the findings support the view that the environment within which young mammals develop, comprised of its mother and siblings, is of paramount importance in interpreting spaceflight effects.

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