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Mice in space showed liver damage after two weeks
by Staff Writers
Miami (AFP) April 20, 2016


Scientists unable to teach an old mouse new tricks
Brisbane, Australia (UPI) Apr 20, 2016 - You can't teach an old dog new tricks. Turns out, you can't teach an old mouse new tricks, either.

It's a cliche, but it's at least partially true -- as people age, adaptation comes less naturally. Young people tend to adopt new technologies more fluidly, while older people stick with what they know.

Now, science explains why. It's mostly a matter of brain circuitry, researchers say, and a new study involving lab mice is proof.

As part of the study, researchers trained old and young mice to press levers for two different types of food, one grain-based and one sweet-tasting. Next, the mice were trapped in a container for several hours and give only grain-based food.

When the mice were freed and given access to the levers, they opted exclusively for the sweetened food -- having grown tired of the grain.

To test their ability to adapt, researchers switched the lever mechanisms so that the lever that used to deliver sweet food now delivered grain and vice versa. Young mice were able to quickly adapt and begin exclusively eating sweetened food after being relegated to grain.

Older mice failed to make the simple adjustment.

Researchers were able to pinpoint the neural decline in the aging mice. Aging mice showed diminished activity along a neural pathway called the parafascicular-to-cholinergic interneuron pathway, or PF-to-CIN -- a pathway linked with goal-directed learning.

When scientists purposely impaired the pathway in younger mice, they showed the same inability to adapt as their aged peers.

Researchers say their findings suggest motivational deficits likely interfere with older people's ability to adjust during goal-oriented learning. In other words, the weakening of an aging brain's neurological reward system diminishes its ability to learn new tricks.

The scientists published their study results in the journal Neuron.

"We think that it is of utmost importance that motivational decline is considered as a condition in its own right, so that strategies can be efficiently implemented early on to prevent motivational problems in the aged," said study author Jesus Bertran-Gonzalez, a professor or neurology at the University of Queensland.

"In addition to extending the quality of life in the elderly, efficient restoration of motivational behaviors could in some cases reduce the risk of further cognitive decline and progression to dementia."

Lab mice that spent just two weeks in orbit showed early signs of liver damage upon returning to Earth, raising concern about what long-duration spaceflight might do to humans, researchers said Wednesday.

The findings could interest the US space agency, which plans to send people to deep space destinations such as an asteroid or Mars by the 2030s -- missions that will require long stays in space.

NASA is already studying the effects of long-term spaceflight on the human body, and recently sent one of its veteran astronauts, Scott Kelly, on a 340-day stay at the orbiting International Space Station, a mission that also included a Russian cosmonaut.

"Prior to this study we really didn't have much information on the impact of spaceflight on the liver," said lead author Karen Jonscher, an associate professor of anesthesiology and a physicist at the University of Colorado's Anschutz Medical Campus.

"We knew that astronauts often returned with diabetes-like symptoms but they usually resolved quickly."

The mice spent 13 and a half days aboard the space shuttle Atlantis in 2011.

Once back on Earth, researchers found that spaceflight appeared to trigger certain cells that may cause scarring and long-term organ damage.

Namely, the mice showed increased fat storage in their livers, as well as a loss of retinol, an animal form of Vitamin A.

They also showed changes in their ability to break down fats, and showed signs of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease "and potential early indicators for the beginnings of fibrosis, which can be one of the more progressive consequences of NAFLD," said the study.

Researchers already know that spaceflight can cause a loss of bone and muscle mass, as well as changes in vision and brain function in people.

Jonscher said the signs of liver damage they saw in mice would typically take months to years to develop by eating an unhealthy diet.

"If a mouse is showing nascent signs of fibrosis without a change in diet after 13.5 days, what is happening to the humans?" she asked.

The findings were published in the journal PLOS ONE.

NASA did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

"Whether or not this is a problem is an open question," Jonscher said.

One possibility is that the stress of spaceflight, particularly the jiggling, noise and commotion on departing and re-entering Earth's atmosphere, contributed to the liver damage.

Further study on the tissues of mice flown at the International Space Station for months could shed more light on whether microgravity plays a role in liver damage.

"We need to look at mice involved in longer duration space flight to see if there are compensatory mechanisms that come into play that might protect them from serious damage," Jonscher said.


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