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The role of gravity in the evolutionary emergence of multicellular complexity: Microgravity effects on arthropod development and aging

Authors :
C. Diaz
Jesús Mateos
José Antonio Mas
E. de Juan
Alberto Benguria
Roberto Marco
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
1999
Publisher :
Elsevier, 1999.

Abstract

While experiments carried out in Space with isolated cells have shown that eucaryotic cells are able to sense and respond to the absence of gravity by modifying their reactions, experiments in which more complex processes have been investigated, such as Biological Systems undergoing development under Microgravity. have been surprisingly unaffected by the space environment. This can be considered a curious result since all organisms are evolutionarily adapted to the current level of the gravity force in our planet and should eventually change if this parameter will vary in a permanent manner. In fact, the small effects of the modifications in gravity on development in short term experiments may be equivalent to the difficulties in detecting the involvement of other basic physical processes such as diffusion-controled auto-organizative reactions in currently developing biological systems. An apparent exception to this lack of effect is experiments where brine shrimp dormant gastrulae directly exposed to the space environment accumulate developmental defects as a consequence of cosmic irradiation. In this article we discuss the idea that at a certain stage during the evolutionary emergence of multicellular organisms the cues laid by generic forces such as gravity were involved in the evolutionary organization of these primitive organisms. As evolution proceed, these early mechanisms may have been obscured and/or made redundant by the appearance of new internal, environment-independent biological regulatory mechanisms. On the other hand, behavioral responses that may be important, for example, in setting the life-spans of organisms may still be more readily susceptible to manipulation by external cues as experiments carried out by our group in Space and on the ground with Drosophila melanogaster indicate.<br />The financial support of the Spanish National Space Program (ESP97-1775) and of ESA is gratefully acknowledged.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02731177
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Space Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2396593fc0c06e0835e1b2a11d602b25