The NATO Project: Nanoparticle-based Countermeasures for Microgravity-induced Osteoporosis
Livia Visai, Associate Professor, University of Pavia
Recent advances in nanotechnology applied to medicine and regenerative
medicine have an enormous and unexploited potential for future space and
terrestrial medical applications. The Nanoparticles and Osteoporosis
(NATO) project aimed to develop innovative countermeasures for secondary
osteoporosis affecting astronauts after prolonged periods in space
microgravity. Calcium- and Strontium-containing hydroxyapatite
nanoparticles (nCa-HAP and nSr-HAP, respectively) were previously
developed and chemically characterized. This study constitutes the first
investigation of the effect of the exogenous addition of nCa-HAP and
nSr-HAP on bone remodeling in gravity (1 g), Random Positioning Machine
(RPM) and onboard International Space Station (ISS) using human bone
marrow mesenchymal stem cells (hBMMSCs). In 1 g conditions, nSr-HAP
accelerated and improved the commitment of cells to differentiate
towards osteoblasts, as shown by the augmented alkaline phosphatase
(ALP) activity and the up-regulation of the expression of bone marker
genes, supporting the increased extracellular bone matrix deposition and
mineralization. The nSr-HAP treatment exerted a protective effect on
the microgravity-induced reduction of ALP activity in RPM samples, and a
promoting effect on the deposition of hydroxyapatite crystals in either
ISS or 1 g samples. The results indicate the exogenous addition of
nSr-HAP could be potentially used to deliver Sr to bone tissue and
promote its regeneration, as component of bone substitute synthetic
materials and additive for pharmaceutical preparation or food
supplementary for systemic distribution.
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