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Research Seminar

October 11, 2023

Location: SB 156

Time: 12:00 pm

Presenter: Dr. Alamelu Sundaresan

Bone loss and immune suppression in stressful physiological environments

Abstract:

Bone loss in microgravity is the second most important risk to space missions.

Exposure to the microgravity environment of space causes astronauts to lose calcium from bones. This loss occurs because the absence of Earth’s gravity disrupts the process of bone maintenance in its major function of supporting body weight.

Exposure to the microgravity environment of space causes men and women of all ages to lose up to 1% of their bone mass per month due to disuse atrophy, a condition like osteoporosis. It is not yet clear whether losses in bone mass will continue if a person remains in the microgravity environment or level off in time.

The mystery, for the moment, is what signals permit bone tissue to adapt to a weightless or an Earth (1 g) environment. Researchers do not yet know whether the biomechanical stimuli that are changed by microgravity directly affect osteoblast and osteoclast function or if other physiological factors such as hormone levels or poor nutrition contribute to bone loss. NASA investigators are studying gravity-sensing systems in individual bone cells by flying cultures of these cells on the Space Shuttle and observing how they function. Discoveries made during space biomedical research on bone are already contributing to a better understanding of osteoporosis and the treatment of bone mass loss on Earth as well as in space. The single most important contribution that NASA research has made to the understanding of bone deterioration in osteoporosis is heightened awareness of the importance of gravity, activity, and biomechanics – that is, the mechanical basis of biological activity – in bone remodeling.

Mechanical forces – the action of energy on matter – appear to coordinate bone shaping processes. The standard theory of bone remodeling states the body translates mechanical force into biochemical signals that drive the basic processes of bone formation and resorption. Aging, especially in post-menopausal women, and exposure to microgravity uncouple bone resorption and formation. When this uncoupling occurs, formation lags behind resorption, and the result is bone loss.Researchers are not yet certain whether bone resorption speeds up or the bone formation slows down, though recent experimentation in space indicates that microgravity might somehow affect both processes. Progress in developing methods of preventing or treating disuse atrophy and osteoporosis depends on better understanding the mechanisms that cause the problem. Determining how the body translates mechanical loading (physical stress or force) into the signals that control bone structure may reveal how aging, inactivity, and space flight uncouple bone formation and resorption. Only in the absence of gravity can we determine the influence of weight and stress on bone dynamics. By studying what mechanisms translates mechanical stress on bones into biochemical signals that stimulate bone formation and resorption, space life scientists may be able to determine how to maintain bone mass

 
Alamelu Sundaresan presently serves as the Chairperson- (Int) for the Department of Biology, housed in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology at Texas Southern University, Houston, Texas. The main goal of her research is to study human immunology in adverse environments, and what happens when the immune system is compromised such as in cancer, ageing, microgravity, nutritional deficiency, and auto immune conditions. We also work with nutritional supplements to improve the immune system towards global health solutions and collaborate internationally on this.

Main foci include bone tissue engineering (three patents), nutritional immunomodulation, mathematical modelling & toxicology of radiation, biophysics, particulates, and neurodegeneration. Dr Sundaresan is an Adjunct Faculty in the Dept of Surgery at UT health involved with inflammation, toxicity, and immune response. She is also a Visiting Scientist at NASA’s Johnson Space Centre in Houston.

She has authored more than 100 peer reviewed publications and 150 presentations. All her projects involve international collaboration. We work and network with many key collaborators in Denmark, Norway, Brazil, UK, and Germany to name a few. The lab is presently funded by the NSF, NIH, NASA, and industry.